Style U.S. Army Center of Military History For Use in the Preparation of

Style
U.S. Army
Center of Military History
For Use in the Preparation of
CMH Historical Publications
Contents
1. Names and Terms
General. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
People. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Public Acts and Military Orders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Publications and Their Parts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Military. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Designations of U.S. Army Units and Organizations. . . . .
Designations of U.S. Navy, Air Force, and
Marine Corps Units. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Rank and Title Designations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Military Equipment, Weapons, Ships, and Aircraft. . . . . .
Foreign Military Terms, Units, and Ranks . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1-1
1-3
1-6
1-7
1-9
1-12
1-15
1-16
1-19
1-20
2. Punctuation
General. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Apostrophe. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Brackets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Colon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Comma. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Ellipsis Points. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Exclamation Point . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Hyphens and Dashes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Hyphen. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
En Dash . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Em Dash. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Parentheses. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Period. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Quotation Marks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Semicolon. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2-1
2-2
2-3
2-3
2-4
2-8
2-8
2-8
2-8
2-10
2-11
2-13
2-14
2-14
2-15
3. Spelling, Abbreviations, Compounds, and Distinctive
Treatment of Words
Preferred Spellings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Abbreviations and Acronyms. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Punctuation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Plurals. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Compounds and Hyphenation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Italics. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Quotations and Dialogue. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3-1
3-1
3-3
3-4
3-4
3-6
3-7
iii
Run-In and Block Quotations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-9
Permissible Changes to Quoted Material . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-9
Lists. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-10
Foreign Words and Phrases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-11
Word Division and Line Breaks. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-12
4. Geographic Terms
Capitalization. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Abbreviations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Foreign Geographic Terms. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4-1
4-3
4-6
5. Numbers
Express in Words . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Express in Figures. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Multiple Numbers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
5-1
5-2
5-3
6. Dates, Time, and Measurements
Dates. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Time . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Measurements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
6-1
6-3
6-4
7. Tables, Charts, Maps, and Photographs
General. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Tables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Charts. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Photographs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Maps and Diagrams. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
7-1
7-1
7-2
7-3
7-3
8. Documentation
Footnotes and Endnotes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Published Works. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Abbreviations, Punctuation, and Capitalization. . . . . . . . .
Archival Material. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
World Wide Web References and Digital
Document Collections. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Historians Files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Bibliography. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Books . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Periodicals. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Government Publications. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Unpublished Works. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Arrangement of Entries. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
iv
8-1
8-2
8-5
8-9
8-15
8-17
8-18
8-18
8-20
8-21
8-21
8-22
9. Front and Back Matter
Books and Monographs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Front Matter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Back Matter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Brochures and Pamphlets. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9-1
9-1
9-5
9-6
10. Indexes
General. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10-1
Alphabetizing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10-3
Units. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10-5
Abbreviations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10-12
Formatting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10-13
Editing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10-14
Appendix A. Words List
Appendix B. Additional Service Ranks Abbreviations
Appendix C. Rank Insignia of the U.S. Armed Forces
Index
Tables
1-1. Army Rank Abbreviations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1-18
4-1. U.S. State and Territory Abbreviations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4-5
8-1. Footnote and Endnote Abbreviations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8-6
9-1. Book and Monograph Organization. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9-2
Figures
9-1. Half Title Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9-2. Frontispiece. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9-3. Title Page. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9-4. LOC CIP Data Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9-5. Advisory Committee Page. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9-6. Table of Contents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9-7. Foreword. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9-8. Author Bio. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9-9. Preface. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
9-7
9-8
9-9
9-10
9-11
9-12
9-16
9-17
9-18
Miscellany
Candidate for a Pullet Surprise. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3-15
v
1
Names and Terms
I hope I shall possess firmness and virtue enough to maintain
what I consider the most enviable of all titles, the character
of an honest man.—George Washington
General
1.1 Countries. Capitalize official and shortened names of countries.
Republic of Iraq; Iraq
Islamic Republic of Afghanistan; Afghanistan
Democratic Peoples’ Republic of Korea; North Korea
Democratic Republic of Vietnam; North Vietnam
United States of America; United States; America
1.2 Cities, states, provinces, territories. Capitalize official and
shortened names of cities, states, districts, provinces, and
territories; lowercase words such as city, district, and province
when they precede the name or stand alone.
Baghdad
Anbar Province
Adolous District of Ramadi
New York City; city of New York
roads through the province
1-1
1.3 Legislative bodies and government agencies. Capitalize
the full and shortened names of legislative, deliberative,
administrative (including cabinet level), and judicial bodies.
Capitalize the full names of their branches. Lowercase
derived adjectives and paraphrased forms.
U.S. Congress
Department of Defense; Defense Department
United Nations Security Council; Security Council
Republic of Vietnam National Assembly
Department of the Army
Joint Chiefs of Staff; Joint Chiefs
Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army (Manpower & Reserve
Affairs)
Army Staff; Joint Staff
Army Secretariat
but
congressional
presidential
the department
the council
the assembly
the office
the secretariat
the staff
family support group
family readiness group
general officer steering committee
1.4 Generic references. Lowercase the words federal and
government unless they are part of a formal title. Likewise,
lowercase the terms executive, legislative, or judicial branch.
United States government (but United States Government Printing
Office)
federal government policy
government of Afghanistan
1-2
1.5 Political parties. Capitalize names of political parties and
party members, but not the doctrine with which they are
associated.
Ba’ath Party; Ba’athists
Republican Party; Republicans
People’s Revolutionary Party
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan
Communist leaders; Communists
but
communism
socialism
democratic principles
1.6 Private organizations. Capitalize the full and shortened names
of private organizations.
Microsoft Corporation; Microsoft
Dell Inc.; Dell
Blackwater USA; Blackwater
Lockheed Martin Corporation; Lockheed Martin
1.7 Organized groups. Capitalize common nouns referring to
specific organized groups.
Afghan National Police
Northern Alliance
Civilian Irregular Defense Group
People
1.8 First and subsequent mentions. Give the full name including
the middle initial (or initials), if any, at first mention of a
person in text. Each initial is followed by a period and a
space. For military names, see 1.48.
George H. W. Bush
William J. Clinton
If the entire name is abbreviated in subsequent mentions,
omit periods and spaces.
FDR [Franklin Delano Roosevelt]
JFK [John F. Kennedy]
1-3
1.9 Foreign notables. Cite the names of Chinese notables generally
following the pinyin system of romanization.
Mao Zedong, not Mao Tse-tung
Zhou Enlai, not Chou En-lai
Lin Biao, not Lin Piao
but
Chiang Kai-shek, not Jiang Jieshi
Cite the names of Arab notables that contain the definite
article al by joining it to the next name with a hyphen.
Sheikh Adil al-Hadithi
Abu Musab al-Zarqawi
Moqtada al-Sadr
Ali al-Sistani
Nouri al-Maliki
Abbas al-Jeboury
Adnan al-Ziruffi
Abdul Majid al-Khoei
Ayman al-Zawahiri
Arab names with Mohammed in them.
Mohammed Bakir al-Hakim
Mohammed Jassim
but
Prophet Muhammad
1.10 Civilian titles. Capitalize civilian titles preceding a personal
name. Do not use honorific titles, such as Dr. (unless
a physician), Mr., Ms., or Mrs., in formal writing or
acknowledgments. Lowercase titles that follow a personal
name or that stand alone. Retain capitalization of specific
organizations included in a title. For military titles, see 1.47.
Governor Robert F. McDonnell; Robert F. McDonnell, governor of
Virginia
Congressman Hoyer; the congressman
President Obama; the president
Chief Justice Roberts; John Roberts, chief justice of the United
States
Ambassador Rice; the ambassador
Secretary of the Army John M. McHugh; the secretary of the Army;
the secretary
1-4
Under Secretary of the Army Joseph W. Westphal
Joel D. Meyerson or Meyerson, not Dr. Meyerson
Janice E. McKenney or McKenney, not Ms. McKenney
Capitalize titles that follow names in front matter such as a
preface or formal acknowledgments and lists of contributors.
The author wishes to acknowledge his indebtedness to C. R.
Dodwell, Fellow and Librarian of Trinity College, Cambridge.
1.11 Abbreviating titles. A civil or military title may be abbreviated
when it precedes the full name. Preceding the surname
alone, however, it is spelled out. For more information on
abbreviating military titles in text, see 1.48–51; in footnotes,
see 8.12, 8.18.
Sen. Mark L. Kirk; Senator Kirk
Lt. Col. Mary J. Pierce; Colonel Pierce
Pfc. Richard F. Jones; Private Jones
Capt. John P. Sims; Captain Sims
S. Sgt. James J. Smith; Sergeant Smith
Sfc. Kathryn L. Jacobson; Sergeant Jacobson
Spec. John P. Doe; Specialist Doe
1st Lt. Carl L. James; Lieutenant James
Lt. Gen. Joseph E. Green; General Green
1.12 Plurals. Form plurals of names of persons and other
capitalized nouns generally by adding s or es.
five Toms, four Dicks, and three Harrys
the two Germanys reunited
Afghanis and Pakistanis
keeping up with the Joneses
rainy Sundays
Never use an apostrophe to form the plural of a family name:
“The Jeffersons live here” (not “Jefferson’s”). With names
such as Gates or Gutierrez, consider rewording to avoid the
awkwardness of “Gateses” or “Gutierrezes.”
1-5
1.13 Racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic groups. Capitalize racial,
linguistic, tribal, religious, and ethnic names used as nouns
and adjectives.
Sunni
Shi’ite
Rhade tribesmen
African American
Caucasian
Muslim
Asian
Iraqi
Taliban
al-Qaeda
but
blacks and whites
Public Acts and Military Orders
1.14Capitalize formal or shortened (but not generic) titles of
specific public acts, treaties, and military orders.
Pentalateral Agreement
Panama Canal Act; Canal Act; the act
Selective Service Act
General Orders 23
U.N. Security Council Resolution
Treaty on Limitations of Antiballistic Missiles; ABM Treaty; the treaty
but
armistice (capitalize only when referring specifically to Armistice
Day)
lend-lease aid
1.15Do not capitalize generic references to congressional
legislation.
agricultural appropriations bill
lend-lease bill
military construction appropriation bill
1-6
Publications and Their Parts
1.16Capitalize the first word and all important words (nouns,
verbs, and prepositions containing five or more letters) in
titles of series, books, articles, chapters, and sections. Do not
capitalize infinitive verb forms and prepositions containing
four or fewer letters.
Underdevelopment Is a State of Mind
German Railway Operations Under the United States of America
The Corps of Engineers: The War Against Germany
The Asian Experience Outside Indochina
Chapter 7, “Steps Toward Stability”
From OSS to Green Berets: The Birth of Special Forces
but
“City Offers to Build Housing for Yanks”
Lessons from the Huk Campaign in the Philippines
1.17Italicize full or shortened titles of all books, pamphlets,
certain Army documents, newspapers, periodicals, journals
published for general distribution, works of art, plays, and
motion pictures. Italicize titles of CMH monographs and
studies printed for limited distribution.
Building for Peace: U.S. Army Engineers in Europe, 1945–1991
Battleground Iraq: Journal of a Company Commander
The U.S. Army in the Occupation of Germany, 1944–1945
Operations (DA FM 3–0)
Military History: Responsibilities, Policies, and Procedures (AR 870–5)
Dictionary of United States Army Terms (WD TM 20–205)
1.18 Do not italicize the title of a series. Do not italicize titles of
internal Army documents, such as orders, directives, and
memos. Capitalize initial letters of important words, without
quotation marks.
Combat Actions in Korea, Army Historical Series
United States Army Center of Military History (DA GO 2007–01)
Army Strategic Management Plan (DA Memo 5–4)
Employment of Military Resources in the Event of Civil
Disturbances (DoD Directive 3025.12)
1-7
1.19Capitalize titles of the standard parts of a volume, such as
the Foreword, Preface, Chapter, Bibliography, or Index; but
lowercase generic references.
Chapter Two, “Research and Development in the Army”
but
In addition to a foreword, the book has five chapters, a bibliography,
and an index.
1.20 Capitalize references in the text to specific parts of publications
when they are followed by a number or letter designation.
Volume 1
Annex B
Section 6
Map 19
Chapter 2
Chart 1
Part 1
Book 2
Table 4
Appendix G
Do not capitalize references to the following parts of publications.
page 129
paragraph 10
item 46
footnote 156
1.21 Tables, maps, and charts. Capitalize and italicize parenthetical
references to tables, maps, diagrams, and charts.
(Map 1)
(Table 4)
1-8
Military
1.22 Capitalize formal full and shortened names of national armies,
navies, air forces, fleets, regiments, battalions, companies, and
corps in both the singular and plural forms. Capitalize Army
when standing alone only when it refers to the entire United
States Army. Lowercase words such as army, navy, or military
when standing alone, when used collectively in the plural, or
when not part of an official title.
U.S. Army; Army; the army [referring to a field army]; U.S. soldiers
U.S. Air Force; Air Force; air force [referring to a generic or foreign
air force]
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
U.S. Marine Corps; Marine Corps; U.S. marines; a marine
Regular Army
Confederate army [American Civil War]
Continental navy [American Revolution]
Army of the Republic of Vietnam
South Vietnamese Army; army
Kosovo Liberation Army
Lowercase generic references to individual members of the
military.
soldier
reservist
engineers
regulars
national guardsmen
1.23Capitalize widely used military or colloquial coinages for
members of branches of the armed forces or members of
specific units.
Rangers
Army Special Forces
Seabees
Green Berets
Raiders
Marauders
1-9
1.24Capitalize the formal names of national guard and reserve
units.
Army National Guard of the United States; Army National Guard
Air National Guard of the United States; Air National Guard
Army Reserve
Naval Reserve
Marine Corps Reserve
Air Force Reserve
Coast Guard Reserve
Also capitalize the three reserve categories.
Ready Reserve
Standby Reserve
Retired Reserve
Do not capitalize the word reserve unless referring to a
particular reserve force in an organizational sense.
a reserve officer
the reserve components
strategic reserves
1.25Capitalize adjectives designating the armed services or their
arms and branches only when the reference in context is
clearly to the organization and not merely descriptive.
the Air Force budget
the Army way is not the Navy way
but
infantry troops
the marine guard
1.26Capitalize the word headquarters only when preceding the
name of a unit.
Headquarters, 9th Division
General Headquarters
but
9th Division headquarters
headquarters of the division
1-10
1.27 Capitalize formal designations for specific political or military
alliances.
Multi-National Force–Iraq
the Coalition
Free World Military Assistance Forces
the Allied Powers (in World War II only)
but
European powers
coalition troops; coalition forces
1.28Capitalize common terms that have a special meaning in
military usage.
Blue armies (maneuvers)
Force XXI
Team Bravo
Company A
1.29 Do not capitalize common-noun designations when standing
alone for army, corps, and lower units.
There were three divisions in the corps and three corps in the army.
1.30 Capitalize formal names of wars, battles, conflicts.
Persian Gulf War
Global War on Terrorism
Battle of 73 Easting
Battle of Medina Ridge
World War II
Revolutionary War
Vietnam War
1.31 Code names. Set U.S. and allied forces code names (such as
task forces, operations, plans, exercises, war plans) in caps
and small caps.
Operation Iraqi Freedom
Operation Joint Guardian
Desert Storm
War Plan Orange
Project Enhance
Task Force Dagger
1-11
1.32 Set enemy code names in caps and small caps, and italics.
Nordwind
1.33 Medals and awards. Capitalize military medals and awards.
Presidential Unit Citation
Distinguished Service Cross
Medal of Honor
Defense Distinguished Service Medal with four Oak Leaf Clusters
Defense Distinguished Service Medal with oak leaf clusters
Silver Star Medal
Bronze Star Medal
Purple Heart
Designations of U.S. Army Units and Organizations
1.34 Unit names. Capitalize formal names of specific units of
armed forces.
VII Corps
XVIII Airborne Corps
4th Aviation Regiment
Company A (not A Company)
First Army
23d Infantry Division
II Field Force
3d Squadron, 2d Armored Cavalry Regiment
75th Ranger Regiment
1st Battalion, 7th Field Artillery Regiment
299th Support Battalion
Special Troops Battalion, 1st Infantry Division
4th Infantry Division (Mechanized)
101st Airborne Division (Air Assault)
1-12
Note: Words in parentheses (such as Mechanized or Air
Assault in the above examples) are not part of the official
designation but are descriptions of function usually added by
members of units and can sometimes be quite cumbersome.
Use of such descriptors is left to the author’s discretion.
1.35 Changes in unit designations. Both U.S. and foreign unit
designations change over time. Follow the naming conventions
in use during the time period under discussion.
1st Division [6 July 1917 until 31 July 1942]
1st Infantry Division [1 August 1942 until the present]
Note: For units under its purview, John B. Wilson’s Armies,
Corps, Divisions, and Separate Brigades, Army Lineage Series
(Washington, D.C.: U.S. Army Center of Military History,
1987) provides an authoritative guide to designations. For
smaller units, see the other volumes of the Army Lineage
Series. When in doubt, consult the CMH Field Programs
and Historical Services Division, Force Structure and Unit
History Branch, which is the authority on official unit
designations.
1.36 Regiment designations. Omit the word regiment in the name
of a U.S. Army regiment prior to 1 October 2005 because it
is generally not considered part of the official designation;
after that date, the word is part of its designation and should
be used. If the word is used in the plural before that date, it
should be lowercased; after that date, it should be uppercased.
3d Battalion, 23d Infantry Regiment
75th Ranger Regiment
27th and 35th Infantry regiments
Note: In some cases, the word regiment was part of the
official designation prior to 1 October 2005. Exceptions
include the 90th Quartermaster Regiment and the 75th
Ranger Regiment. When in doubt, consult the CMH Field
Programs and Historical Services Division, Force Structure
and Unit History Branch, which is the authority on official
unit designations.
1.37 Use a comma before and after a phrase indicating the larger
group to which a unit belongs.
The 2d Battalion, 27th Infantry, began to move.
1.38If the possibility of confusion exists in cases where U.S.
military units are deployed alongside units from other
countries, identify each unit (U.S. and foreign) by nationality,
especially at first mention. See also 1.56.
1-13
1.39 Center of Military History. At first mention of CMH in text,
use the full title of U.S. Army Center of Military History;
subsequent references may simply state Center of Military
History or the Center.
1.40 Abbreviations in text. Short names of military organizations
may be used after the full name is given at first mention.
U.S. Army Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC)
U.S. Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV)
1.41 Abbreviations in tables and charts. Generally, do not abbreviate
military unit designations. However, it is permissible to do
so in tables, charts, and footnotes where space may be at a
premium.
1.42 Spell out numbers of U.S. field armies.
Eighth Army
1.43 Use roman numerals for U.S. corps and field forces.
XXIV Corps
II Field Force
1.44Use arabic numerals for U.S. Army groups, commands,
brigades, divisions, regiments, battalions, squadrons,
companies, detachments, and platoons.
12th Army Group
1st Logistical Command
3d Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division
2d Battalion, 2d Infantry Regiment
1st Squadron, 14th Armored Cavalry Regiment
17th Fires Brigade
3d Sustainment Command
209th Military Intelligence Company
50th Signal Battalion
90th Military History Detachment
512th Military Police Platoon
1.45 Do not begin a sentence with a unit number (when given as
a figure), whether arabic or roman (such as XV Corps). An
acceptable work-around for beginning a sentence with a unit
number is inserting the in front of the number. Do not spell
out the unit number.
The V Corps stationed its armored cavalry regiment well forward to
screen and observe the border.
1-14
Designations of U.S. Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps Units
1.46 For designations of other service units, follow the conventions
used by that service during the period under discussion.
U.S. Air Force
Seventh Air Force
1964th Communications Group
315th Air Division
777th Troop Carrier Squadron
3d Tactical Fighter Wing
320th Bombardment Wing
U.S. Navy
Seventh Fleet
Amphibious Squadron 5
Task Force 76
Attack Carrier Wing 16
Task Group 79.5
30th Naval Construction Regiment
U.S. Marine Corps
III Marine Amphibious Force
Marine Air Group 12
1st Marine Brigade
Marine Medium Helicopter, Squadron 161
3d Marine Aircraft Wing
3d Marines [regiment]
1st Marine Division
1-15
Rank and Title Designations
1.47 Capitalization. Capitalize military titles preceding a personal
name. Lowercase military titles when standing alone or when
following a name.
Chief of Staff, II Field Force, Brig. Gen. Richard T. Knowles;
General Knowles; II Field Force chief of staff; chief of staff;
brigadier general; the general
Commander, 1st Infantry Division, Maj. Gen. Jonathan O.
Seaman; General Seaman; 1st Infantry Division commander;
commander; the general
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Martin E. Dempsey;
General Dempsey; chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; the
chairman
Chief of Staff, Army, General Raymond T. Odierno; Chief of Staff,
U.S. Army, General Raymond T. Odierno; Chief of Staff General
Raymond T. Odierno; Army Chief of Staff General Raymond T.
Odierno
Sgt. Stephanie H. McGraw; Sergeant McGraw; sergeant
Pvt. Anthony W. Washington; Private Washington; private
but, with the article “the,”
the U.S. Army chief of staff, General Raymond T. Odierno
the inspector general
the adjutant general
the surgeon general
the judge advocate general
1-16
1.48 Initial and subsequent text references. In the initial reference
to military personnel in text, give full rank, abbreviated (for
exception, see 1.51), and full name including the middle
initial (or initials), if any. Reintroduce military personnel in
full each time they are promoted.
Brig. Gen. Joseph E. Green
Lt. Col. John R. Doe
R. Adm. John R. Jones
S. Sgt. William T. Smith
Col. Benjamin A. “Monk” Dickson
Bvt. Brig. Gen. Duncan L. Clinch
On subsequent mentions, give only the rank (without
abbreviation) and last name. It is permissible to use the last
name alone as well.
General Green
Colonel Doe
Admiral Jones
Sergeant Smith
Colonel Dickson
General Clinch
If the initial reference to a military officer with a numbered
rank, 1st or 2d Lt., falls at the beginning of a sentence, spell
out the number only.
Second Lt. George Parker was stationed at Fort Benning, Georgia.
1.49 Separate a name from the military service or branch to which
the individual belongs with commas.
Lt. Col. John R. Doe, U.S. Marine Corps, was in command.
1.50 Abbreviation style. While current military practice is to
omit periods and use full capitals for the abbreviated forms
of ranks, CMH discourages using such forms as they may
be unfamiliar to general readers. Traditional (old style)
abbreviations are preferred. Table 1-1 lists the preferred
abbreviations for Army ranks, both in text and in footnotes.
See 1.48 for format of a brevetted rank. See Appendix B for
abbreviations of other service ranks (Navy, Marines, Air
Force). For more information on abbreviating military ranks
in footnotes, see 8.12.
1-17
Table 1-1. Army Rank Abbreviations
Rank
General of the Army (5-star)
General (4-star)
Lieutenant General (3-star)
Major General (2-star)
Brigadier General (1-star)
Colonel
Lieutenant Colonel
Major
Captain
First Lieutenant
Second Lieutenant
Chief Warrant Officer
Chief Warrant Officer
Chief Warrant Officer
Chief Warrant Officer
Warrant Officer
Sergeant Major of the Army
Command Sergeant Major
Sergeant Major
First Sergeant
Master Sergeant
Sergeant First Class
Staff Sergeant
Sergeant
Corporal
Specialist (Fourth Class)
Private First Class
Private E-2
Private E-1
Text
Abbreviation
Footnotes
None
None
Lt. Gen.
Maj. Gen.
Brig. Gen.
Col.
Lt. Col.
Maj.
Capt.
1st Lt.
2d Lt.
CWO5
CWO4
CWO3
CWO2
WO1
SMA
Cmd. Sgt. Maj.
Sgt. Maj.
1st Sgt.
M. Sgt.
Sfc.
S. Sgt.
Sgt.
Cpl.
Sp4c. (to 1985)
Spec. (modern)
Pfc.
Pvt.
Pvt.
Gen
Gen
Lt Gen
Maj Gen
Brig Gen
Col
Lt Col
Maj
Capt
1st Lt
2d Lt
CWO5
CWO4
CWO3
CWO2
WO1
SMA
CSM
Sgt Maj
1st Sgt
M Sgt
Sfc
S Sgt
Sgt
Cpl
Pay
Grade
O-10
O-9
O-8
O-7
O-6
O-5
O-4
O-3
O-2
O-1
W-5
W-4
W-3
W-2
W-1
E-9
E-9
E-9
E-8
E-8
E-7
E-6
E-5
E-4
Spec
E-4
Pfc
Pvt
Pvt
E-3
E-2
E-1
1.51 No abbreviation. Never abbreviate the rank of four-star
general and above or its equivalent in text. For exception in
footnotes, see 8.18.
General of the Army [five star]
Fleet Admiral [five star]
Admiral [four star]
General [four star]
1-18
Military Equipment, Weapons, Ships, and Aircraft
1.52 Types of military equipment. Capitalize the formal names of
types of aircraft, missiles, tanks, weapons, and other military
equipment.
Stryker
Abrams
Bradley
Apache
Black Hawk
Kiowa Warrior
However, do not capitalize common nouns following the
names of types of aircraft, tanks, or other military equipment.
Apache helicopter
Raven unmanned aerial vehicle
Javelin antitank missile
Bradley fighting vehicle
Barrett sniper rifle
1.53 Weapons designations. Designations for individual weapons,
ordnance (ammunition), and weapons systems (tanks, selfpropelled artillery) are set with capital letters with no spaces
or dashes. Given in brackets are explanations of the kind of
weapon or weapon system.
AK47 [assault rifle]
M1 [tank or rifle]
M109 [self-propelled artillery]
T34 [tank]
M16A2 [rifle]
M4A2 [tank]
1.54 Ships and aircraft. Italicize names (not types) of ships and
aircraft.
USS Abraham Lincoln
USNS Bellatrix
HMS Falmouth
Spirit of St. Louis
but
a UH–72A Lakota helicopter
1-19
1.55 Ship and aircraft designations. Use capital letters and en
dashes (not hyphens) in aircraft and ship designations. Given
in brackets are explanations of the kind of aircraft or ship.
C–130 [fixed-wing aircraft]
B–52 [fixed-wing aircraft]
BB–61 [battleship]
UH–1 [helicopter]
Foreign Military Terms, Units, and Ranks
1.56 Enemy unit names. Generally, italicize references to specific
enemy units. However, do not italicize enemy unit names in
special studies dealing almost exclusively with enemy activities
or in works dealing with the more distant past, such as the
American Revolution. Do not italicize generic references to
enemy military units.
Republican Guard
Iraq’s 3d Armored Division
People’s Army of Vietnam
but
Communist insurgents
1.57Do not italicize names of foreign organizations and
institutions.
al-Qaeda
Taliban
the Lao Dong Party
al-Jazeera television network
Agence France Presse news agency
1.58 Translate all foreign (non-English) designations that parallel
the American version; otherwise, use the foreign terms.
German Fuchs (Fox) chemical reconnaissance vehicle
Fuehrer Begleit Brigade
1.59It is permissible to specify nationality if there is some
possibility of ambiguity, even if nationality is not part of the
official title.
North Vietnamese 5th Division
1-20
1.60Senior officers. At first mention, write out the full rank
of general and flag officers comparable in precedence to
equivalent American ranks. Be consistent either in writing
these full titles in the foreign language or in translating them
into English. In subsequent references, use the American
equivalent for rank.
1.61 Lower-ranking personnel. Below the rank of general or flag
officer, use the American equivalent. Abbreviate rank, in
English, with full name at first mention.
1.62Do not italicize foreign titles preceding proper names of
individuals.
Capt. Islam Islamabad commanded the Iraqi VII Corps logistics
installation.
Under the command of Maj. Gen. Maher Rashid, the Republican
Guard Forces Command and the III and VII Army Corps
attacked the strategic, Iranian-held Al Faw Peninsula.
1-21
2
Punctuation
On the page, punctuation performs its grammatical function,
but in the mind of the reader, it does more than that. It tells
the reader how to hum the tune.—Lynne Truss
General
2.1 Space following punctuation. One space, not two, follows
any mark of punctuation, including period, colon, question
mark, or exclamation point.
2.2 Parentheses and brackets should appear in the same font as
the surrounding text.
Several Republican Guard units (III Iraqi Corps, 1st Mechanized
Division, and 6th Armored Division) were mentioned in the text.
The KPA quickly crushed South Korean defenses at the 38th
Parallel and entered Seoul on 28 June. (See Map 9.)
The officer closed his journal entry by saying, since “the troops
were marching & being conscious of my own innocence I
rejoined my blattoon [sic].”
When a phrase in parentheses or brackets appears on a line
by itself, the parentheses or brackets are usually in the same
font as the phrase.
(To be supplied)
2.3 Punctuation marks should appear in the same font as the
surrounding text.
Did the text include a discussion of the sinking of the USS Arizona?
2.4 Boldface. The appropriate use of punctuation marks that
follow boldface type depends on how the boldface word is
used.
Note: The following….
Danger! Watch for falling rocks.
What’s the point in clicking on Help?
2-1
Apostrophe
2.5 Possessives. In the case of a singular or plural noun not ending
in s, form the possessive by adding an apostrophe and s; for a
singular or plural noun ending in s or with the s sound, form
the possessive by adding an apostrophe only.
man’s, men’s
prince’s, princes’
Jones’, Joneses’
Dumas’
2.6 Descriptive words. Do not use an apostrophe after plural
words ending in s that are more descriptive than possessive
(not an indication of personal possession).
an editors handbook
historians files
the officers club
users guide
Note: A slight difference in wording can determine whether a
word is descriptive or possessive.
three months of probation three months’ probation
the Smith children
the Smiths’ children
two-year sabbatical
two years’ sabbatical
2.7 Generally, the apostrophe should not be used after names of
countries and other organized bodies ending in s.
United States control
Massachusetts laws
2.8 Compound nouns. In compound nouns, apostrophe s is added
to the element nearest to the object of possession.
quartermaster general’s decision
John White Jr.’s promotion
2.9 Joint possession. When two or more people jointly possess an
item, the apostrophe is placed after the noun closest to the item.
Bryan and Hildy’s responsibility [Bryan and Hildy share the
responsibility.]
When two or more people separately possess items, an
apostrophe or an apostrophe s is added to each noun.
Bryan’s and Hildy’s responsibilities [Bryan and Hildy have separate
responsibilities.]
2-2
Brackets
2.10 Editorial changes. Use brackets in quoted material to enclose
editorial interpolation, explanations, translations of foreign
terms, or corrections.
At the end of the Second World War, the Truman Committee of
the United States Senate criticized “the unpardonable waste of
money [because] the services failed to use modern business
practices.”
The commander’s note said, “The fact that he speaks Spanish and
is a native of Porto Rico [sic] is greatly in his favor.”
“The nature of the terrain and the defense put up by the enemy,”
reported Soule, “leads to the conclusion that the enemy MLR
[Main Line of Resistance] has been reached.”
2.11 Within parentheses. Use brackets for internal parentheses.
(Adam Yarmolinsky, The Military Establishment: Its Impact on
American Society [New York: Harper & Row, 1971], and . . .)
Colon
2.12 Run-in lists. Use a colon to introduce a run-in list following
a grammatically complete sentence. For additional guidance
on lists, see 3.42–47.
The convoy included a total of 20 ships: 2 cruisers, 4 destroyers, 8
cargo transports, and 6 troop carriers.
but
The chief requirements for this operation are surprise, speed, and
firepower.
2.13 Compound titles. Use a colon to separate parts of a compound
title.
Nisei Linguists: Japanese Americans in the Military Intelligence
Service During World War II
Transforming an Army at War: Designing the Modular Force, 1991–
2005
March to Victory: Washington, Rochambeau, and the Yorktown
Campaign of 1781
2-3
2.14 Introductory text. Use a colon to introduce a quotation of
more than one sentence.
Brig. Gen. Larry L. Just, Commanding General, 3d Corps Support
Command, once said: “How can you argue about deploying
medical units? I mean, they’re just angels of mercy.”
2.15 Capitalization following. When a colon introduces two or
more sentences, or when it introduces a speech in dialogue or
a quotation, the first word following it is capitalized. See 2.27,
8.14.
Major O’Steen would later remark: “We got this mission to go into
the center of An Najaf to secure the mosque where al-Sadr was
hiding.”
When a colon is used within a sentence, lowercase the first
word following the colon unless it is a proper name.
USAREUR designated a number of critical tasks: conducting
patrols, establishing and operating an observation post,
conducting mine clearance, and securing a route.
The program, however, was plagued by a number of problems from
the onset: unfamiliarity with U.S. Army organization, weapons,
tactics, and procedures.
Comma
2.16 Series. Use a comma between each item within a series of
three or more words, phrases, letters, or figures used with and
or or. For use of semicolons in a series, see 2.65.
the army group, the armies, and the corps
2.17 Introductory phrases. An introductory phrase of any length
should be followed by a comma.
In terms of peacekeeping operations, V Corps found that the
United Nations lacked any standardized model for deploying
peacekeeping forces.
Despite the emphasis on speed and surprise, Army units did not
encounter many enemy troops at the outset.
In 1970, the Directorate for Civil Disturbance Planning and
Operations began to review the Army’s principal civil disturbance
regulation.
2-4
2.18 Parenthetical elements. Use commas to set off parenthetical
elements if a slight break is intended. If a stronger break is
needed or if there are commas within a parenthetical element,
use em dashes (see 2.45) or parentheses (see 2.48) instead.
On the following day, 17 October, a British officer waving a white
handkerchief stood on the rampart with a drummer beating for a
parley.
Of the two matters that principally concerned V Corps during
the Cold War, readiness and gunnery, readiness became
considerably the more important by 2001.
2.19 Addresses and place names. Use commas to set off the
individual elements in addresses or place names that are run
into the text. No comma appears between a street name and
an abbreviation such as SW or before a postal code (see also
4.14).
Proofs were sent to the author at 743 Olga Drive NE, Ashtabula,
OH 44044, on May 2.
We were treated to a tour of Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
The infantry conducted a demonstration near Seoul, South Korea.
2.20 Given name suffixes. Do not use commas around Jr. and Sr.
or to set off II, III, and such when used as part of a name.
George W. Wilson Jr. has eclipsed his father’s fame.
John A. Doe III is the son of John A. Doe Jr.
2.21 Corporate suffixes. Do not use commas around Inc., Ltd.,
and such as part of a company’s name.
The president of Millennial Products Inc. was the first speaker.
2.22 Numbers. Use a comma to set off three-digit units in figures,
except serial numbers, dates, and page numbers.
2,309
504,734
3,799,544
2-5
2.23 “Et al.” The abbreviation “et al.,” whether used in regular text
or (more often) in bibliographic references, should be treated
as one would treat the phrase “and his/her colleagues” or
“and their group.” When it follows a single item, it requires
no preceding or following comma; when it follows two or
more names, a second comma should be used. Note that it is
not italicized and that no period follows “et” (which is not an
abbreviation).
Baumann et al. (2004) was the primary reference used in that
chapter.
Baumann, Robert F., et al. My Clan Against the World: U.S. and
Coalition Forces in Somalia, 1992–1994. Fort Leavenworth,
Kans.: Combat Studies Institute Press, 2004.
2.24 Series of short clauses. When a sentence is composed of a
series of short dependent clauses with a conjunction joining
the last two, use commas (rather than semicolons) between
the clauses and before the conjunction.
The second column ascended the Wabash from Fort Vincennes,
destroyed villages along the way, and finally joined with
Harmar’s column after a 150-mile march.
For guidance on using semicolons to separate independent
clauses in a series that contains commas, see 2.63.
2.25 That v. which. Although which can be used restrictively,
maintain the distinction between the restrictive that (no
commas) and the nonrestrictive which (commas).
(Restrictive) The commander revealed that three enemy divisions
would attack that night.
(Nonrestrictive) The Turkish 1st Brigade, which was attached to the
25th Infantry Division, was just east of the Filipino unit.
(Nonrestrictive) On 7 June, the 15th Infantry replaced the 65th,
which went into reserve for rest and refitting.
2-6
2.26 Adverbial and parenthetical expressions. Expressions of the
that is type are usually followed by a comma. They may be
preceded by a comma, an em dash, or a semicolon; or the
entire phrase being introduced may be enclosed in parentheses
or em dashes. When or is used in the sense of “in other words,”
it is preceded by a comma.
None was equipped as horse artillery, that is, with enough horses to
accommodate the men.
The committee—that is, its more influential members—wanted to
drop the matter.
The incident illustrates one of Harris’ most basic tenets in Korea,
namely, a recognition of the need for reliable communications at
all times.
Canister, or case shot, was a metal cylinder containing metal
fragments.
2.27 Quotations. Use a comma to set off introductory material
preceding a quotation; if preceded by a complete sentence or
if the passage consists of more than one sentence (see 2.14–
15), use a colon. If a quotation is introduced by that, whether,
or a similar conjunction, no comma is needed.
It was Emerson who wrote, “Blessed are those who have no talent!”
She replied, “I hope you are not referring to me.”
Was it Stevenson who said that “the cruelest lies are often told in
silence”?
He is now wondering whether “to hold, as ’twere, the mirror up to
nature.”
2.28 Parentheses and brackets. When the context calls for a comma
at the end of material in parentheses or brackets, the comma
follows the closing parenthesis or bracket. For formatting
guidance, see 2.2.
The regiment was to include a lieutenant colonel (from
Pennsylvania), 2 majors (one from Connecticut and one from
Pennsylvania), 8 captains, 10 ensigns, and a chaplain.
Having commanded the 65th for two years (including nine months
in combat), Harris looked upon his successor with some disdain.
“Conrad told his assistant [Martin], who was clearly exhausted, to
rest.”
2-7
Ellipsis Points
2.29 Ellipsis points (formed by three spaced periods preceded and
followed by a space) indicate the omission of quoted words.
They should always appear on the same line (see 3.69) and
may precede or follow other punctuation (see 3.31, 3.39). For
proper use of ellipsis points in a quoted passage, see 3.30–31.
Exclamation Point
2.30 Use an exclamation point to indicate an outcry or an emphatic
or ironic comment. Use exclamation points sparingly.
The name Honest John came from a Texan who was overheard
saying: “Why, around these parts I’m called ‘Honest John’!”
In the evening of 23 July [1776], Baron Closen wrote in his diary: “I
admire the American troops tremendously!”
Note: The exclamation point is placed inside quotation
marks, parentheses, or brackets only when it is part of the
quoted or parenthetical matter.
Hyphens and Dashes
2.31Hyphens and the various dashes all have their specific
appearance (shown below) and uses.
hyphen en dash –
em dash —
2-em dash ——
3-em dash ———
Hyphen
2.32 Numbers. Use a hyphen to separate numbers that are not
inclusive, such as telephone numbers, social security numbers,
and ISBNs. Also use hyphens to separate individual letters
when a word is spelled out.
1-800-621-2376
0-226-10389-7
My name is Diane; that is D-I-A-N-E.
2-8
2.33 Compound words. Use a hyphen to show the combination of
two or more words into a single term representing a new idea.
lend-lease
air-ground teamwork
dozer-infantry team
but
linkup
airpower
firepower
2.34 Single-letter designation. Use a hyphen to join a single capital
letter to a noun or participle.
D-Day [6 June 1944] otherwise D-day
X-ray
H-bomb
H-hour
U-boat
T-square
I-beam
E-series
2.35 Ordnance. Hyphenate sizes of weapons and ammunition
when used adjectively.
105-mm. howitzer
.45-caliber round
3.5-inch rocket
2.36 Multiple hyphenated compounds. Where two or more hyphened
compounds have a common basic element and this element is
omitted in all but the last term, retain the hyphens in all.
six- and ten-foot boards
land- and carrier-based planes
2.37 Fractions. Use hyphens between the numerator and the
denominator in spelled-out fractions unless one already
contains a hyphen.
two-thirds
twenty-three thirtieths
three one-thousandths
twenty-two twenty-fifths
2-9
En Dash
2.38 Connecting numbers. Use an en dash to connect numbers and,
less often, words. The en dash signifies up to and including (or
through). For the sake of parallel construction, the word to,
never the en dash, should be used if the word from precedes
the first element; similarly, the word and, never the en dash,
should be used if between precedes the first element. For use
of an en dash to connect consecutive numbers, see 5.13–14.
The Chinese Civil War of 1945–1949 continued a struggle that had
begun in 1927.
For documentation and indexing, see chapters 16–18.
During the 21–23 May meetings, the two commanders in chief
agreed upon a united Franco-American strategy.
The legislature voted 101–13 to adopt the resolution.
but
It was the principal field piece of the Army from 1905 to 1917 [not
from 1905–1917]
A new insular police force was formed between 25 and 27 January
1899 [not between 25–27]
Early estimates indicate five thousand to ten thousand [not five–ten
thousand or 5–10,000] people were injured in the earthquake.
2.39 Connecting numbers and letters. Use an en dash to connect
combinations of figures, letters, or figures and letters.
1966–1973
CH–54 [helicopter]
G–3 [staff position]
pp. 550–55
B–52 [fixed-wing aircraft]
UH–1D [helicopter]
SS–20 [rocket]
pp. B-2–B-6
2.40 Indicate period of time. Use an en dash in the absence of to
when denoting a period of time.
during June–August 1976
18–19 July
2.41Use an en dash alone following a date to indicate that
something (a publication or a person’s life) is still going on.
No space follows the en dash.
Professor Plato’s survey (1999–) will cover the subject in the final
volume.
2-10
2.42 In place of a hyphen. Use an en dash in place of a hyphen in
a compound adjective when one of its elements is an open
compound or when two or more of its elements are open
compounds or hyphenated compounds.
the post–World War II years
a hospital–nursing home connection
a nursing home–home care policy
a quasi-public–quasi-judicial body (or, better, a judicial body that is
quasi-public and quasi-judicial)
but
non-English-speaking peoples
a wheelchair-user-designed environment (or, better, an environment
designed for wheelchair users)
Note: Abbreviations in compounds are treated as single
words, so a hyphen, not an en dash, is used in such phrases as
“U.S.-Canadian relations.”
2.43 Compound of hyphenated place names. Use an en dash in
combinations of place names when any of the units contains
a hyphen or consists of more than one word.
Al Fallujah–Baghdad route
Saigon–Cam Ranh Bay road
Em Dash
2.44 Use the em dash to set off a parenthetical material. To avoid
confusion, don’t use more than two em dashes in a sentence; if
more than two elements need to be set apart, use parentheses
(see 2.48).
2-11
2.45Use an em dash (or a pair of em dashes) to set off an
amplifying or explanatory element. (Commas or parentheses
may perform a similar function; see 2.18, 2.48.)
Both divisions operated with three combat commands—A, B, and R
(Reserve).
Rochambeau enjoyed a reputation of being level-headed, able
to compromise for the sake of mission, and willing to work
with fellow officers—all characteristics that were crucial for
cooperation with the Americans.
Nevertheless, foot dragging—perceived or real—on the part of the
Army usually brought the strongest reaction from the president.
A two-day training exercise during which the soldiers ran patrols,
manned observation posts, and had to react to various
situations—again facilitated by the noncommissioned officers
and officers of the 1st Battalion, 10th Special Forces Group—
completed the training.
2.46 2-em dash. Use a 2-em dash to indicate a name, part of a name,
or a word has been omitted. When indicating expletives, use
only the first and last letters separated by a 2-em dash.
General P—— and Mrs.—— are the defendants in the case.
“Oh s——t!” I swallow deep and tell the driver to floor it. We got
contact!
2.47 3-em dash. Use a 3-em dash to indicate that an entire name or
word has been omitted in a bibliographic reference (see 8.47).
Dastrup, Boyd L. The Field Artillery: History and Sourcebook.
Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1994.
———. King of Battle: A Branch History of the U.S. Army’s Field
Artillery. Training and Doctrine Command Branch History Series.
Fort Monroe, Va.: Office of the Command Historian, U.S. Army
Training and Doctrine Command, 1992.
———. Modernizing the King of Battle, 1973–1991. U.S. Army
Field Artillery Center and School Monograph Series. Fort Sill,
Okla.: Office of the Command Historian, U.S. Army Field Artillery
Center and School, 1994.
2-12
Parentheses
2.48 Use parentheses to set off material that is less closely related
to the rest of the sentence than that enclosed in em dashes or
commas. See 2.18, 2.45, 2.50.
Wilson became director of military programs at the newly
designated Headquarters, USACE (replacing the Office of the
Chief of Engineers), and General Withers succeeded Wilson as
commander of the Europe Division.
2.49 Do not place a punctuation mark (such as a comma) in front
of the opening parenthesis; any necessary punctuation should
follow the closing parenthesis. A closing parenthesis should
never be preceded by a comma or a semicolon.
He reported to Colonel Smith (Commander, 161st Infantry), who
was in charge of the operation.
2.50Question marks, exclamation points, and closing quotation
marks precede a closing parenthesis if they belong to the
parenthetical matter; they follow it if they belong to the
surrounding sentence.
2.51If a parenthetic reference forms a complete sentence, the
closing parenthesis follows the period. See 2.55.
(He issued the order at 1430.)
2.52 Multiple parenthetical elements. A combination of parentheses
and em dashes may be used, if necessary, to avoid confusion
with multiple parenthetical elements.
Between 1942 and 1962, a succession of major Army commands—
Army Ground Forces (1942–1948), Army Field Forces
(1948–1955), and Continental Army Command (1955–1962)—
had overseen the Army’s doctrinal, educational, and training
activities.
2.53 Multiple parentheses. Parentheses should rarely appear back
to back. Different kinds of material may, if necessary, be
enclosed in a single set of parentheses, usually separated by a
semicolon.
2-13
Period
2.54A period marks the end of a declarative or an imperative
sentence and is followed by a single space.
2.55When a complete sentence is enclosed in parentheses or
brackets, the period belongs inside the closing parenthesis
or bracket. When the text in parentheses or brackets, even a
grammatically complete sentence, is included within another
sentence, the period belongs outside.
The higher-echelon army artillery included an army artillery park of
three park batteries. (Each battery consisted of laborers to make
repairs and issue materiel and spare parts.)
The nucleus of trained artillerists was small (only 275 officers and
5,253 enlisted men in the Regular Army had more than one year
of service).
Quotation Marks
2.56 Titles. Use quotation marks for references to part, chapter,
and section titles of published books and titles of maps,
charts, tables, illustrations, and appendixes. For documenting
bibliographic entries, see 8.37.
Chapter 2, “A Perspective on Military History”
The table “Growth of the Army” makes this clear.
2.57 Use quotation marks to enclose titles of magazine and newspaper
articles, exhibits, speeches and lectures, and dissertations and
theses. For bibliographic entries, see 8.40–41, 8.44.
2.58Do not use quotation marks to enclose book series titles
and works that are printed but not published for general
distribution such as official circulars, orders, bulletins,
directives, or reports. Do not use italics (see 1.18).
Awards of Medal of Honor (WD GO 20)
Army Strategic Management Plan (DA Memo 5–4)
2.59 Coined phrases. Use quotation marks to alert readers that a
term is used in a nonstandard, ironic, or other special sense.
For introducing a key new term in text, see 3.22.
In disk-to-film technology, “repros” are merely revised proofs.
“Child protection” sometimes fails to protect.
2-14
2.60Do not use quotation marks around expressions following
terms such as known as, called, or so-called.
His so-called mentor persuaded him to embezzle from the Army.
2.61 Punctuation. Place periods and commas inside quotation
marks, whether double or single.
MID replied that it could provide a thousand Nisei “of high-school
and university caliber,” since “other services would not touch
them in quantities without time-consuming security screening.”
“Whatever our sympathies with Germany’s victims might be,”
Skelton argued, “it is incredible that we would tamely accept the
role cast for us by some overseas directors.”
2.62Place colons, semicolons, question marks, and exclamation
points outside quotation marks (unless the question mark or
exclamation point is part of the quoted matter).
He also had made “two tremendously important contributions of
lasting significance”: First, . . . .
Whatever became of the “McNamara revolution”?
“Are they ready to cooperate with us?”
Semicolon
2.63Use a semicolon to separate independent clauses that are
closely related in thought, especially if there are commas
within the clauses.
The 1st Battalion, under Lt. Col. John Q. Doe, held the left sector;
the 2d Battalion, under Maj. James A. Robinson, held the right.
2.64Precede the following adverbs, among others, with a
semicolon when used to transition between independent
clauses: then, however, thus, hence, indeed, accordingly, besides,
and therefore.
The maximum range of field artillery cannon, depending upon size,
was from 1,200 to over 2,000 yards; however, with untrained
soldiers and imperfect weapons, the effective range was actually
about 400 yards.
The supply of gasoline ran short at the critical moment; therefore,
the tanks were halted for nearly three weeks.
2-15
2.65 Serial lists. Use semicolons to separate items within a sentence
if the items themselves contain commas.
They were located in Groton, Connecticut; Portsmouth, New
Hampshire; and Providence, Rhode Island.
2.66 Use semicolons to separate individual footnote entries (see 8.15).
2-16
3
Spelling, Abbreviations,
Compounds, and Distinctive
Treatment of Words
Bad spellers of the world, untie!—Graffito
Preferred Spellings
3.1 CMH uses the latest edition of Webster’s Third New
International Dictionary, Unabridged (Merriam-Webster’s),
and its abridged version, Merriam-Webster’s New Collegiate,
11th Edition, as the primary authority on spelling and word
usage.
Consult Appendix A for a list of commonly used terms and
their preferred treatment.
Abbreviations and Acronyms
3.2 Use abbreviations (particularly acronyms) sparingly. A
workable alternative is to use short titles when possible.
3.3 Abbreviate in the text only when the abbreviation has
become established in ordinary or military usage and occurs
frequently in the narrative.
3-1
3.4 The first time an acronym or abbreviation is used in a
volume, place it in parentheses after the spelled-out term. It
is permissible to reverse this practice when the abbreviation
is more familiar than the spelled-out term. In subsequent
references, the preferred practice is to use the abbreviation
as a modifier, not as a noun. Introducing an acronym one
time in a book is acceptable if an Abbreviations section is
provided in the back matter. If the book is to be indexed, the
reader will have the index as an additional resource that will
cite many of the acronyms from the text with their spelledout versions.
U.S. Department of Defense (DoD)
U.S. Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV)
USAID (U.S. Agency for International Development)
Civilian Irregular Defense Group (CIDG)
light armored vehicle (LAV)
rocket-propelled grenade (RPG)
improvised explosive device (IED)
Note: Avoid using acronyms and abbreviations in chapter
titles and section headings. Wait until first use in text to use
the abbreviation and its spelled-out term.
3.5 “A” or “an” preceding an abbreviation. When an abbreviation
follows an indefinite article, the choice of a or an is determined
by the way the abbreviation would be read aloud. Acronyms
are read as words and, except when used adjectivally,
are rarely preceded by a, an, or the (“member nations of
NATO”). Initialisms are read as a series of letters and are
often preceded by an article (“member nations of the EU”).
an HQDA directive
a HMMWV [pronounced Humvee]
a URL reference
a U.S. Army training exercise
an NCO
a NATO meeting
an ROTC class
an RPG attack
an 800 number
3-2
3.6 Abbreviate parts of publications and documents when
mentioned parenthetically, in footnotes, or in lists of
references.
an. app. art. bk. ch. col. ed. fig. item
[annex]
[appendix]
[article]
[book]
[chapter]
[column]
[edition, editor]
[figure]
[no abbreviation]
n.; nn. no. p.; pp. para. pt. sec. ser. vol. [note; notes]
[number]
[page; pages]
[paragraph]
[part]
[section]
[series]
[volume]
Punctuation
3.7 Use periods in lowercase abbreviations employed in the
text; use no periods with abbreviations that appear in full
caps, whether two letters or more. Except a.m. and p.m., the
preferred practice in formal writing is to spell out lowercase
abbreviations in the text. For exceptions in footnotes, see 8.17.
p.
e.g.
etc.
p.m.
vol.
et al. [et is not an abbreviation; al. is the abbreviation for alii ]
AUSA
NATO
3.8 Use periods when abbreviating academic degrees (B.A., M.S.,
Ph.D.).
3.9 Use periods when abbreviating U.S. and U.K. The abbreviation
is permissible when used as an adjective, but spell out United
States when used as a noun.
U.S. dollars
U.S. involvement in Asia
but
He was born in the United States.
3-3
Plurals
3.10To form the plural of capital letters used as words,
abbreviations that contain no interior periods, and numerals
used as nouns, simply add s.
the three Rs
the 1990s
ICBMs
vol., vols.
URLs
ed., eds.
1960s
TOEs
twos and threes
but
p. [page], pp. [pages]
n. [note], nn. [notes]
3.11 To avoid confusion when forming plurals of lowercase letters
and abbreviations containing two or more interior periods
or where both capital and lowercase letters are used, add an
apostrophe and an s.
x’s and y’s
M.A.’s and Ph.D.’s
Compounds and Hyphenation
3.12Hyphenate words combined to form a unit modifier
immediately preceding the word or words modified if the unit
modifier is hyphenated in the latest edition of Webster’s or if
the meaning would not be clear without the hyphen.
long-term loan
well-known man
service-connected disability
but
civil rights case
flood control project
3-4
3.13Do not hyphenate a two-word unit modifier when the first
element of the modifier is an adverb ending in ly or if the first
element of a three-word modifier is an adverb that modifies
the noun.
a highly successful action
3.14Do not hyphenate unit modifiers that are proper names,
organizations, and military units.
field grade officer
25th Division forces
air support control
tank destroyer battalions
3.15 In general, do not hyphenate prefixes. For exceptions, see 3.16–19.
antiaircraft
postwar
semiofficial
counterintelligence
outnumbered
subsection
coordinate
reenlistment
transship
3.16Hyphenate the prefix ex and the combining form self.
Hyphenate the adjective quasi when combined with another
adjective, but write it as a separate word when modifying a
noun.
ex-governor
quasi-judicial
self-interest
quasi argument
3.17 Hyphenate to join duplicating prefixes and to join a prefix or
initial combining forms to a capitalized word.
sub-subcommittee
trans-African
but, per 3.1,
transatlantic
transpacific
3-5
3.18 Hyphenate to avoid tripling a consonant or doubling a vowel
except after the short prefixes co, de, pre, pro, and re.
bell-like
semi-independent
hull-less
anti-inflation
reenlist
but
cooperation
3.19 Hyphenate to avoid ambiguity.
re-form [a unit]
re-create [create again]
pre-position
3.20 In general, do no hyphenate suffixes; except see 3.21.
clockwise
twentyfold
warlike
3.21Hyphenate elect and odd
president-elect
twenty-odd
Italics
3.22 Set in italics any words singled out as terms. Thereafter, set in
roman.
the word beachhead
The two chief tactics of this group, obstructionism and
misinformation, require careful analysis.
3.23 Do not italicize normally italicized words when they appear
in an italicized passage (such as photo captions).
The USS Henrico is pictured on the right.
3.24Do not italicize the possessive portion of an italicized word
or phrase.
the 101st Regiment’s commander
the Eltinge’s deck.
3.25Use italics when referring to individual letters and
combinations of letters of the alphabet.
3-6
the letter q
a lowercase n
a capital W
The plural is usually formed in English by adding s or es.
He signed the document with an X.
I need a word with two e’s and three s’s.
3.26 Do not italicize letters that are used to represent shapes; capitalize
and set in roman type (an S curve, an L-shaped room).
3.27Do not italicize commonly used Latin terms. For further
guidance on treatment of foreign words and phrases, see
3.48–52.
ad hoc
c.
cf.
de facto
e.g.
et al.
etc.
habeas corpus
i.e.
ibid.
idem
passim
viz.
v.
but
Italicize sic.
“Mindful of what has been done here by we [sic] as agents of
principle.”
Quotations and Dialogue
3.28Rekey all quoted material exactly as in the original. Avoid
exceedingly long quotations or many quoted single words or
phrases. If a quotation of several pages is necessary, consider
making it an appendix. For permissible changes to quoted
material, see 3.37–41.
3-7
3.29 Permission to reprint. If an author quotes from any
copyrighted publication to an extent of 500 words or more,
written permission must be obtained from the publisher to
use the quoted passages.
3.30Use ellipsis points (three spaced dots) to indicate omissions
within a quoted passage. For formatting ellipsis points, see
2.29. For other punctuation with ellipsis points, see 3.39.
Since there is only one war, “friendly forces have got to . . . carry
the battle to the enemy.”
One senior U.S. general declared in August 1950 that “the
North Korean guerrillas are . . . at present the single greatest
headache to U.S. forces.”
3.31Use a period followed by ellipsis points after a complete
sentence to indicate the omission of the beginning of the
next sentence, the omission of a complete sentence, or the
omission of one or more paragraphs.
“This day [8 September 1781],” wrote Maj. William Popham, “will
be famous in the annals of History for being the first in which
the Troops of the United States received one month’s Pay in
Specie—all the civil and military staff are excluded. . . . I cannot
even obtain my pay as Captain in the Line.”
3.32Direct quotations of any length require separate footnotes.
Place the footnote reference number at the end of a sentence
regardless of where the quotation falls within the sentence.
For additional guidance on footnotes, see 8.4.
3.33A quotation may be introduced with that when the quoted
material is used as a syntactical continuation of the
introductory text (in such cases the quotation begins with a
lowercase letter even if the original is a complete sentence);
use a colon with terms such as wrote, declared, or reported. A
colon should be used if the introductory text is a complete
sentence.
General Pershing made clear that “revolutions begin when. . . .”
General March reported: “At the time the armistice with Germany
was signed. . . .”
3-8
Run-In and Block Quotations
3.34 Run-in quotations. Quotations constituting fewer than five
lines of text (in the final page layout) should be run in with
the text and enclosed in quotation marks.
3.35 Block quotations. Quotations of five or more lines (in final
page layout) should be separated from surrounding text and
set as block quotations. A block quotation should be set in a
type size one or two points smaller than the main body text
and indented from both margins. The block quotation is set
apart from the surrounding text with extra spacing above and
below the quoted material. Do not indent the first line of a
block quotation (even if the quoted material is indented). If
the quotation includes more than one paragraph, indent the
second and subsequent paragraphs.
3.36 Use double quotation marks rather than single to indicate a
quoted phrase within a block quotation.
Permissible Changes to Quoted Material
3.37Single quotation marks may be changed to double, and
double changed to single.
3.38The first letter may be changed to a capital or a lowercase
letter.
3.39The final period may be omitted or changed to a comma
as required, and punctuation may be omitted where ellipsis
points are used.
3.40When quoting text that contains notes and note reference
marks, the original notes and reference marks may be omitted
and summarized in the accompanying text. Alternatively, the
original notes may be addressed in an accompanying footnote
with an explanatory comment, such as “Johnson cites Nelson
and Gateman.”
3-9
3.41Obvious typographic errors may be corrected silently
(without comment or sic) whereas the idiosyncratic spelling
in passages quoted from older works is generally preserved.
Huntington wrote in frustration on 7 July 1780: “They Patiently see
our Illustrious Commander at the head of 2,500 or 3,000 Ragged
tho Virtous & good Men . . . without Meat without Cloathing, &
paid in filthy Rags.”
If spelling and punctuation are modernized or altered for
clarity, readers must be so informed in a note, the preface, or
elsewhere as appropriate.
Lists
3.42Avoid using numbered lists except when describing specific
ordered steps in a process.
3.43 Ensure that bulleted lists are parallel; that is, make each item
in the list either a full sentence or a phrase and begin each
item with the same part of speech.
3.44 Introduce a bulleted or numbered list with a colon (regardless
of whether the introductory material is a phrase or complete
sentence) and capitalize the first word in each list item.
Detailed analysis of training requirements produced the following
mission-essential task list:
• Exercising the base camp reaction force
• Responding to media queries, both approved and unapproved
• Responding to civilian requests for food
• Protecting European Union sanctions enforcement personnel
• Conducting VIP briefings
• Reinforcing a temporary observation post
• Responding to hostile Macedonian civilians
3.45 Full sentence style. Introduce the list with a colon and place a
period after each bulleted item. Each item in the list must be
styled in the same manner.
Once the decision to march south was made, the army staffs had
three equally important tasks to accomplish concurrently:
• Provide the logistics for the march.
• Maintain secrecy and deceive British officers of their true
intentions.
• Establish and maintain posts for observing British forces in
New York.
3-10
3.46 Phrase style. Introduce the list with a colon and use no
punctuation for the bulleted items. Each item in the list must
be styled in the same manner.
The following officials are responsible for ensuring awareness of
the Army’s accommodation of religious practices policies:
• Judge Advocate General
• Chief of Chaplains
• Superintendent, U.S. Military Academy
• Commanding General, U.S. Army Training and Doctrine
Command (TRADOC)
• Commanding General, U.S. Army Recruiting Command
(USAREC)
3.47 Numbered lists in running text. Use parentheses to set off
numbered items in running text. Use the same punctuation
that would be used if the numbers and parentheses were not
there. For guidance on introducing the list, see 2.12.
The square infantry division of World War I operated with three
major groups: (1) two 75-mm. gun regiments, each supporting
one infantry brigade of two regiments; (2) a 155-mm. howitzer
regiment supporting the division as a whole; and (3) a trench
mortar battery, all under an artillery brigade headquarters.
Foreign Words and Phrases
3.48 Do not italicize foreign words and phrases that are familiar to
most readers or are listed in Webster’s. For Latin terms, see
also 3.27.
a priori
apartheid
apropos
avant-garde
blitzkrieg
bonafide
coup d’état
machismo
3-11
3.49Italicize foreign words or phrases that are likely to be
unfamiliar to the reader. If a translation follows a foreign
word or phrase, enclose the translation in parentheses, but in
quoted material use brackets. For foreign military terms, see
1.56–62. For foreign geographic terms, see 4.15–17.
He said une poele (frying pan), not un poele (stove).
France employed several traditional colonial military techniques,
including raids, encirclements, and tache d’huile (oil spot)
operations.
Stratemeyer wrote: “We stand ready to assist again when and if the
occasion arises. Maná del Cielo [Manna from Heaven] will arrive
pronto.”
3.50If a foreign word that is not listed in Webster’s is used
repeatedly throughout a work, italicize the word only on its
first occurrence; thereafter, set in roman type.
3.51 Do not italicize foreign proper nouns.
A history of the Comédie-Française has just appeared.
Leghorn—in Italian, Livorno—is a port in Tuscany.
3.52 An entire sentence or a passage of two or more sentences in
a foreign language is usually set in roman and enclosed in
quotation marks.
Word Division and Line Breaks
3.53 Do not divide short words (five or fewer letters).
3.54 Do not divide one-syllable words (bombed, aimed, prayer).
3.55Do not divide words leaving a single letter either at the
beginning or end of a line (o-ver, e‑ven, u-nite).
3.56 Do not carry two-letter end syllables to the next line (clin-ic,
surpris-es, loss-es).
3.57Divide words according to pronunciation. When in doubt,
consult Webster’s.
democ-racy or de-mocracy [not demo-cracy]
3.58 Wherever possible, words should be divided after prefixes and
at the natural breaking point for solid compound words (precursor, bombard-ment, key-board, heli-copter).
3-12
3.59Hyphenated compounds should be divided only at the
hyphen.
Japanese-American [not Japanese-Ameri-can]
Bosnia-Herzegovinia [not Bosnia-Herzego-vinia]
self-determination [not self-determina-tion]
3.60Do not break proper nouns, especially personal names, if
at all possible. If a break within a name is needed, consult
Webster’s for guidance.
A personal name with one or more middle initials should
be broken after the initial or initials. Avoid a break before a
number, Jr., or Sr.
Frederick L. / Anderson
M. F. K. / Fisher
Eliz- / abeth II) [if absolutely necessary]
3.61 Do not break large numbers expressed as numerals.
3.62 Do not break abbreviations used with numerals.
24ºF.
6:35 p.m.
3.63 Do not separate a number or letter, such as (3) or (B), used
in a run-in list from the beginning of what follows it. If it
occurs at the end of a line, it should be carried over to the
next line.
3.64 In dates, do not separate the month from the day, regardless of
which dating style is used—military (preferred) or traditional.
30 March / 2008 [not 30 / March 2008]
April 17, / 1988 [not April / 17, 1988]
3.65 Do not separate references to specific parts of a publication
(such as Chapter 6, Volume II, page 45, Map 3, Table 12)
from the associated numerical designations, such that the
number begins the next line of text.
3-13
3.66 If it becomes necessary to break a URL or an e-mail address,
do not use a hyphen. The break should be made between
elements (after a colon, a slash, a double slash, or the @
symbol) but before a period or any other punctuation or
symbols. To avoid confusion, in URLs containing hyphens,
don’t break at the hyphen.
http://
www.history.army.mil/bookshelves.html
or
http://www
.history.army.mil/bookshelves.html
or
http://www.history.army.mil/book
shelves.html
3.67 Do not allow more than three succeeding lines to end in hyphens.
3.68 Do not break a word at the end of a carryover page (an oddnumbered page where the reader must turn the page to read
the rest of the word). It is permissible to break a word at the
end of a column or facing page; however, this practice should
be avoided.
3.69 Do not break a line in the middle of a set of ellipsis points.
3-14
Candidate for a Pullet Surprise
Mark Eckman and Dr. Jerrold H. Zar
Eye halve a spelling chequer
It came with my pea sea
It plainly marques four my revue
Miss steaks eye kin knot sea.
Eye strike a key and type a word
And weight four it two say
Weather eye am wrong oar write
It shows me strait a weigh.
As soon as a mist ache is maid
It nose bee fore two long
And eye can put the error rite
Its rare lea ever wrong.
Eye have run this poem threw it
I am shore your pleased two no
Its letter perfect awl the weigh
My chequer tolled me sew.
3-15
4
Geographic Terms
Anybody who believes that the way to a man’s heart is through
his stomach flunked geography.—Robert Byrne
The CMH Histories Division cartographer, in consultation with
the U.S. Board on Geographic Names, is the final authority on the
proper form and spelling of geographic terms. For assistance with
specific geographic terms, consult the CMH Histories Division,
Historical Products Branch.
Capitalization
4.1 Capitalize specific geographic features that are formally part
of a proper name.
Euphrates River
Tora Bora Mountains
Persian Gulf
Gulf of Tonkin
Shin Narai Valley
Shamali Plains
Subic Bay
but
the Pacific coast
the Georgia mountains
4.2 Capitalize the words port and harbor if part of the name.
Port of Kuwait
Pearl Harbor
but
the port at Qui Nhon
4.3 Capitalize words such as fort, camp, combat outpost, and landing
zone when part of a proper name, both singular and plural.
Fort Lesley J. McNair
Camp Enari
Combat Outpost Rabi
Forward Operating Base Pacesetter
4-1
4.4 Capitalize general political and military area names that are
typically capitalized in common usage; lowercase names of
geographical areas.
Sunni Triangle
French Indochina
Eastern Europe [political sense, Cold War]
the North [referring to North Vietnam or North Korea or the region
during the Civil War]
Middle East
Central Asia
the East [the Orient]
but
northern Baghdad
northern China
the east coast of Mexico
4.5 Capitalize special military designations indicating particular
areas or boundaries. Do not capitalize generic terms.
International Zone
Green Zone
McNamara Line
European Theater of Operations
17th Parallel
Demilitarized Zone
Hill 601
but
the British sector
theater of operations
European theater
4-2
4.6Capitalize common nouns in names of structures,
thoroughfares, and public places only when the name has
specific official or formal status. When words such as river,
street, building, bridge, park, and square stand alone, they are
lowercased.
Times Square
Empire State Building
Route 4
Kinh Xang Canal
Golden Gate Bridge
but
Wonju-Hoengsong road [indicating unnamed road between the two
places]
the Han River bridge [generic]
the canal
Abbreviations
4.7 U.S. states and territories. Spell out the names of states,
territories, and possessions of the United States in text
when standing alone and when following the name of a city
(except for D.C.). Only use the two-letter, no-period state
abbreviations when followed by a zip code. (Note that some
states and territories are never abbreviated.) See Table 4-1 for
a list of acceptable abbreviations for states and territories.
4.8 Abbreviate place names with Saint in text.
St. Louis
St. Paul
St. Lawrence
4.9 Do not abbreviate county, fort, point, or port in text; but,
where space is at a premium, it is permissible to do so in
tables, charts, and footnotes. San and Santa (e.g., San Diego,
Santa Barbara) are never abbreviated.
Fort Myer
Port Arthur
4.10Use commas to enclose abbreviations of states, provinces,
and territories when they follow the name of a city.
Recruits came from Bedford, Pa., and Jamestown, N.Y.
Sergeant Spiegel has lived in Washington, D.C., all her life.
4-3
Note: Generic terms as elements of geographic names should
be abbreviated only where space is at a premium (such as
tables and maps).
4.11Do not abbreviate names of countries (except USSR) when
used as nouns. Nouns used as modifiers, particularly in
organizational designations, may be abbreviated.
the United States
U.S. Army Center of Military History
the Republic of Korea
4.12If necessary for space consideration in tables, maps, and
charts, country names may be abbreviated. Do so with care,
however, because no universal standard exists for country
name abbreviations. Provide a key to any abbreviations that are
used; either in the overall list of acronyms and abbreviations
for the entire text or in source/reference material immediately
following the table, map, or chart.
4.13 In mailing addresses, tables, maps, and the like, use the following
abbreviations:
Ave.
Blvd.
Dr.
Hwy.
Pkwy.
P.O. Box
Rm.
Sq.
Ste.
Bldg.
Ct.
Expy.
La.
Pl.
Rd.
Rte.
St.
Terr.
4.14Follow single-letter compass points that accompany a street
name with a period. Two-letter compass points do not require
a period. Note that, when used in an address, the abbreviations
NE, NW, SE, and SW remain abbreviated even in text with no
commas separating them from the street name. See also 2.19.
1060 E. Prospect Ave.
456 NW Lane St.
I stayed in a building on M Street SW, close to the city center.
Never abbreviate a compass point that is the name (or part
of the name) of a street or a place name (e.g., South Ave.,
Northwest Hwy., South Shore Dr., West Bend, East Orange).
4-4
Table 4-1. U.S. State and Territory Abbreviations
State/Territory
Abbreviation
Short
Long
State/Territory
Abbreviation
Short
Long
Alaska
AK
Alaska
Montana
MT
Mont.
Alabama
AL
Ala.
North Carolina
NC
N.C.
Arkansas
AR
North Dakota
ND
N.Dak.
American Samoa
AS
Nebraska
NE
Neb.
Arizona
AZ
Ark.
American
Samoa
Ariz.
New Hampshire
NH
N.H.
California
CA
Calif.
New Jersey
NJ
N.J.
Colorado
CO
Colo.
New Mexico
NM
N.Mex.
Connecticut
CT
Conn.
Nevada
NV
Nev.
District of Columbia
DC
D.C.
New York
NY
N.Y.
Delaware
DE
Del.
Ohio
OH
Ohio
Florida
FL
Fla.
Oklahoma
OK
Okla.
Georgia
GA
Ga.
Oregon
OR
Ore.
Guam
GU
Guam
Pennsylvania
PA
Pa.
Puerto
Rico
R.I.
Hawaii
HI
Hawaii
Puerto Rico
PR
Iowa
IA
Iowa
Rhode Island
RI
Idaho
ID
Idaho
South Carolina
SC
S.C.
Illinois
IL
Ill.
South Dakota
SD
S.Dak.
Indiana
IN
Ind.
Tennessee
TN
Tenn.
Kansas
KS
Kans.
Texas
TX
Tex.
Kentucky
KY
Ky.
Utah
UT
Utah
Louisiana
LA
La.
Virginia
VA
Massachusetts
MA
Mass.
Virgin Islands
VI
Maryland
MD
Md.
Vermont
VT
Va.
Virgin
Islands
Vt.
Maine
ME
Maine
Washington
WA
Wash.
Michigan
MI
Mich.
Wisconsin
WI
Wisc.
Minnesota
MN
Minn.
West Virginia
WV
W.Va.
Missouri
MO
Mo.
Wyoming
WY
Wyo.
Mississippi
MS
Miss.
4-5
Foreign Geographic Terms
4.15 Do not italicize foreign geographic names.
4.16Translate foreign common nouns such as river, peninsula,
canal, channel, and bay in names of well-known or commonly
translated features.
Bay of the Seine
Mekong River
but
Cap de la Hague
Song Thai Binh
If the meaning of the foreign common noun is obscure,
translate at first mention.
Hammam al Alil, a facility south of Mosul
Ap Bac, a village near . . .
Rach Ba Rai, a stream flowing into . . .
Nui Ba Den, a mountain near . . .
4.17 If a place is not named on an official map but received a name
as a result of a military operation, use the name that appears
in the military records of the operation.
4-6
5
Numbers
There is no safety in numbers, or in anything else. —James Thurber
Express in Words
5.1 Spell out whole numbers from one through one hundred, and
any number beginning a sentence.
Thirty-two soldiers from eleven divisions attended the three-day
course.
The property is held for ninety-nine years.
The three new parking lots will provide space for 542 more cars.
5.2 Spell out round numbers—hundreds, thousands, hundred
thousands, and millions—whether used exactly or as
approximations.
A millennium is a period of one thousand years.
Some forty-seven thousand persons attended the ceremony.
The building is three hundred years old.
The population of our city is more than two hundred thousand.
The work cost about a million dollars.
5.3 Spell out simple fractions.
one-half yard
three-quarters finished
two-thirds of the staff
5.4 Spell out whole numbers and fractions if short, or use
numerals.
three and one-quarter miles
The report was issued on 8½ x 11 paper.
That wall was exactly 6 feet 5¼ inches high.
When expressing fractions in numerals, set the numerator over
the denominator as in the examples used above (not 8 1/2 x 11).
5-1
5.5See 5.1 and apply when two numbers are expressed together
in a sentence and they are both under one hundred.
The engineers required fourteen twenty-inch beams to finish the job.
The division had two five-ton trucks in the shop to be repaired.
Express in Figures
5.6 Use figures for clock time, dates, compound measurement,
decimals, degrees, money, certain military units, numbers used
in conjunction with D-day and H-hour, and page, chapter, and
volume numbers. For military dates, see 6.1; and time, see 6.9.
5.7 When indicating round sums of money, of a million or more,
use a combination of figures and words.
$1.5 million [not $1,500,000]
5.8 Use figures for numbers of 101 or more, and related numbers
in a passage when the greatest is 101 or higher.
of the 125 rifles, only 15 were repairable
5.9 Use commas in figures containing four or more digits, except
serial numbers, dates, and page numbers.
3,001
54,988
56,743,293
5.10 Use figures for numbers of more than one word when used in
unit modifiers.
155-mm. howitzer
77-year-old man
but
three-year-old truck
twenty-inch beam
thirty-pounder Parrott rifle
5.11Use figures for numbers preceding the word percent. This
usage does not affect the treatment of other numbers in the
same sentence.
the five soldiers had 20 percent of the ammunition
5.12 When using ordinal numbers, omit the letters n and r.
22d Brigade
23d Division
5-2
5.13If each of two consecutive numbers is less than a hundred,
give the second number in full.
pp. 50–55
5.14In connecting consecutive numbers greater than one hundred,
omit hundreds from the second number unless the second
number has a different hundred base or the omission would result
in joining three ciphers. For connecting consecutive dates, see 6.6.
395–97
501–07
272–92
but
395–402
200–203 [not 200–03]
Multiple Numbers
5.15Numbers paired at the beginning of a sentence should be
styled alike. If the first word of the sentence is a spelled-out
number, the second, related number is also spelled out.
Sixty to seventy-five acres were destroyed.
5.16 Numbers that form a pair or a series referring to comparable
quantities within the series should be treated consistently.
The style of the largest number in the series determines the
style of the other numbers. Thus, a series of numbers that
includes some which would ordinarily be spelled out might all
be written as figures. Use figures to express all the numbers in
a series if one of those numbers is a mixed or simple fraction.
Several buildings—one of 103 stories, two of more than 600, and
five of only 5—were targeted by the terrorists.
The population grew from an initial 15,000 in 1990 to 21,000 by
2000 and 34,384 by 2001.
During the war, all cadets received 130 lessons and 46 hours of
field training in counterinsurgency, plus 73 lessons of related
instruction.
The three jobs took 5, 12, and 4½ hours to complete.
This rule applies to ordinal numbers as well.
The restaurant on the forty-fifth floor has a splendid view of the city.
She found herself in 125th position out of 230 applicants.
The twenty-second and twenty-third days of the operation were
marked by renewed attacks.
5-3
6
Dates, Time, and Measurements
We must not allow the clock and the calendar to blind
us to the fact that each moment of life is a miracle and a
mystery.—H. G. Wells
Dates
6.1 Dates. Use the military day-month-year dating system
(without punctuation). When only the month and year
are given, or a specific day (such as a holiday) and year,
no punctuation is needed. When referencing the title of a
published work or quoting a passage that contains monthday-year style dates, do not change to military dating; in
these cases, use commas both before and after the year.
The Continental Congress formally prescribed the composition of
the new organization on 2 December 1775.
On 1 August 2003, General Schoomaker succeeded General
Shinseki as chief of staff.
Another 105-mm. howitzer battalion was organized for the division
in October 1943.
Benedict Arnold, the American traitor, arrived in Portsmouth on New
Year’s Day 1781.
According to his report, “the April 1, 2000, press conference elicited
little new information.”
6.2 Do not use ordinal numbers in expressions of full dates.
They may be used, however, to express a date without an
accompanying year, especially in a commemorative sense.
the Fourth of July
September 11th
6-1
6.3 Abbreviate months and days of the week only in tables,
charts, and footnotes (where space is typically at a premium).
For appropriate abbreviations, see 6.4–5.
29 Jun 1976
3 Sep 2001
not
29 June 76
3 Sept 01
Do not use all-figure dating (such as 6-8-07 or 6/8/07) to avoid
confusion.
6.4 When the names of months must be abbreviated for space
considerations, use the following three-letter abbreviations.
(Note: Omit periods in footnotes; see 8.12.)
Jan.
Feb.
Mar.
Apr.
May
Jun.
Jul.
Aug.
Sep.
Oct.
Nov.
Dec.
6.5 When days of the week must be abbreviated, use the following
abbreviations. (Note: Omit periods in footnotes; see 8.12.)
Sun.
Mon.
Tues.
Wed.
Thurs.
Fri.
Sat.
6.6 In connecting consecutive dates, use all four digits for the
years separated by an en dash (see 2.39).
1880–1895
1997–2004
2000–2001
not
1880–95
1900–06
6-2
6.7 Do not capitalize the term fiscal year. When abbreviating, use
the following convention: FY YYYY.
FY 2008
6.8Hyphenate century when used as a compound adjective
before, but not after, a noun.
twentieth-century artillery
mid-eighteenth-century officers
but
the uniforms were nineteenth century
Time
6.9 Indicate time in connection with military activity on the 24hour basis. It is not necessary to add the word hours. If a
volume does not deal with battlefield activity, it is permissible
to refer to time in the standard manner.
Action started at 0845.
Congress recessed at 11:15 p.m.
6.10Do not use at about to indicate an approximate designation
of time. About is sufficient: “about 0600.”
6.11 In specifying time before or after D-day or H-hour, give the unit
of time following the numerals only if the unit is different from
that symbolized by the letter. “D plus 120” means 120 days
after D-day. “H minus 4” means four hours before H-hour.
but
D plus 4 months
H minus 4 minutes
Note: Write out plus and minus in text rather than using symbols.
6.12 The following abbreviations are used in text and elsewhere.
a.m.
p.m.
The abbreviations a.m. and p.m. should not be used with
morning, afternoon, evening, night, or o’clock, nor should they
be used when using the 24-hour (military) time reference (use
either 3:30 p.m. or 1530). Avoid redundancy, as in “0600 in
the morning.”
6-3
6.13 Time zones, where needed, are usually given in parentheses—
for example, 4:45 p.m. (CST).
EST
EDT
CST
CDT
MST
MDT
PST
PDT
ZULU
eastern standard time
eastern daylight time
central standard time
central daylight time
mountain standard time
mountain daylight time
Pacific standard time
Pacific daylight time
Greenwich mean time
Measurements
6.14 Do not abbreviate or use symbols for most units of measure.
Also choose one form of measurement, either metric or U.S.
system, and use it consistently throughout the manuscript.
15 kilometers
5 feet 8 inches
but
105-mm. howitzers
12.7-cm. gun
6.15 Use symbols to express latitude and longitude.
latitude 52°33'05" north
longitude 128°15'12" west
longitudes 165° west and 170° east
Note: Use primes (') and double primes ("), not quotation
marks (’,”).
6.16 Use figures and a degree symbol to express temperature.
32°F
Note: Degree symbol immediately precedes abbreviation for
Fahrenheit or Celsius; abbreviation requires no period and
no spacing between elements.
6-4
7
Tables, Charts, Maps, and
Photographs
Treat your friends as you do your pictures, and place them in
their best light.—Jennie Jerome Churchill
General
7.1 Insert references to tables, charts, and maps at applicable
portions of text. References should be capped, italicized, and
enclosed within parentheses. (Do not italicize parentheses;
see 2.2.)
(Chart 3)
(Table 2)
(Map 5)
7.2 Reference to an illustration that does not appear on the same,
facing, or next page should add the word See.
(See Table 2.)
(See Map 5.)
7.3 Keep unnumbered tables, charts, and maps to a minimum.
Tables
7.4 Number tables sequentially throughout the work using arabic
numerals followed by an em dash and the title in initial caps.
Table 20—Distribution of Infantry OCS Quotas Among Major
Categories
7.5 Any applicable date or period of time should immediately
follow the main words of the title, preceded by a comma.
Table 15—Armored Division Artillery, 1940–1945
7.6 Units of measure applicable to the entire table should be given
either in the title or directly below the title in parentheses and
in upper and lower case, as (Millions of Dollars). Units of
measure applicable to only some of the columns of the table
should be shown in the applicable column headings.
7-1
7.7 All columns, including the stub (the guiding entries in the
left-hand column), should have headings and are set in initial
caps.
7.8 Use boxed headings in tables having more than two columns.
Use vertical lines for columns, and horizontal lines at the top
and bottom of the table, whenever there are boxed headings.
7.9 For column totals, indent the word Total from the left-hand
margin. Indent subtotal captions halfway between the margin
and the total caption.
7.10Where space is at a premium, abbreviate units of time,
military units, rank, and units of measurement. (Omitting
periods is permissible, if necessary.) Abbreviate consistently
within each table, or not at all. Avoid symbols, such as % and
#, and the abbreviation for number (No.) in column headings.
7.11 Use superscript letters (a, b, c) for table footnote references.
7.12List the source of the data in the table directly below the
footnotes, separated by a space. Follow the word Source
(italicized, initial capped, and indented) with a colon.
7.13If a table continues beyond a single page, repeat the table
number, the full title, and the column headings. Place the
word Continued after the title in parentheses.
Table 10—Artillery Organization, 1877 (Continued)
Charts
7.14 Use arabic numerals to number charts. Set title and indicate
sources in the same form as prescribed for tables. (See 7.4,
7.5, 7.12, 7.13.)
7.15 Use superscript letters (a, b, c) for chart footnote references.
7-2
Photographs
7.16 Captions. Photograph captions may be either phrase or sentence
style. Full sentence captions require a terminal period; phrase
style requires no period. Strive to maintain consistency within a
particular work.
7.17Photograph captions are set directly below the photograph.
Caption text may be set in either roman type or italics. When
using italics, caption text that would otherwise be set in italics
should be set in roman type to distinguish from italicized text.
The American Soldier, 1781, by H. Charles McBarron
7.18When including editorial references, direction, notes, and
the like in captions, enclose in parentheses and set in either
roman type (if the remainder of the caption is set in italics)
or italics (if the remainder of the caption is roman).
General Kennedy (right) with Lt. Gen. William F. Cassidy in June 1968
Army engineer project in Turkey included the barracks in Cakmakli
and a water tower (inset) under construction in Izmit.
Specialist Gridley, Specialist Soto (prone), Staff Sergeant Lewis
(kneeling), and Private Poirier (walking with AT4 missile
launcher)
Engraving by J. Ward from a painting by W. Beechey, 1799
(National Archives)
Maps and Diagrams
7.19 Number maps in sequential order throughout. Capitalize the
word Map, italicize the entire reference, and place below the
map (flush with either left or right edge of map).
Map 9
7.20 Set diagram titles in roman and initial caps. Format diagram
titles same as table titles. (See 7.4, 7.5, 7.13.)
Diagram 4—Riverine Operation and Base Defense
7-3
8
Documentation
First you’re an unknown, then you write one book and you
move up to obscurity.—Martin Myers
The following sections on documentation provide general rules
and advice for citing sources in a consistent and informative way.
Refer to the Chicago Manual of Style 16th edition for help with
specific citation issues not addressed here.
Footnotes and Endnotes
8.1 Footnotes v. endnotes. By definition, footnotes appear at the
foot of the page, and endnotes appear at the end of a chapter
or book. CMH prefers footnotes over endnotes for ease of
reference for the historical scholar. When endnotes are used,
they should appear at the end of each chapter rather than
grouped together at the end of the book.
8.2 Number footnotes consecutively throughout a chapter.
Restart numbering with each new chapter.
8.3 Discursive portions of footnotes should follow the same
editorial style as the main text.
8.4 Direct quotations require separate footnotes. Place footnote
reference numbers for a direct quotation at the end of the
sentence that contains the quotation.
Even within the military, little liking existed for the civil
disturbance role—“ugly duty for the Army,” one senior officer had
called it.54
not
Even within the military, little liking existed for the civil
disturbance role—“ugly duty for the Army,”54 one senior officer had
called it.
8-1
Published Works
8.5 Give full details of published volumes at first mention in the
work. Give full details of unpublished works at first mention
in each chapter of the study. Subsequent mentions (within
the volume or chapter, respectively) may be more concise. See
8.34–38 for bibliographic format.
First note citations
Wesley Clark, Winning Modern Wars: Iraq, Terrorism, and the
American Empire (New York: Public Affairs, 2003), p. 47.
Mark J. Reardon, “Unanticipated Battle: Musayyib—July 2006,”
in Tip of the Spear: U.S. Army Small-Unit Action in Iraq, 2004–2007,
ed. Jon T. Hoffman, Global War on Terrorism Series (Washington,
D.C.: U.S. Army Center of Military History, 2009), pp. 105–27.
Maj. Gen. Joseph A. McChristian, The Role of Military
Intelligence, 1965–1967, Vietnam Studies (Washington, D.C.:
Department of the Army, 1974).
Department of the Army (DA) Field Manual (FM) 17–100, The
Armored Division and Combat Command, chg. 1, June 1959, p. 23.
Army Regulation (AR) 350–25, Civil Affairs Training, April 1967,
p. 1.
War Department (WD) Technical Manual (TM) 20–205,
Dictionary of United States Army Terms, January 1944, p. 159.
Subsequent (shortened) citations
Clark, Winning Modern Wars, p. 47.
Reardon, “Unanticipated Battle,” pp. 105–27.
Mark D. Sherry, “Fighting in the Valley of Peace: Najaf—August
2004,” in Hoffman, Tip of the Spear, Iraq, 2004–2007, pp. 65–83.
McChristian, Role of Military Intelligence, p. 1.
DA FM 17–100, Armored Division and Combat Command, chg.
1, June 1959, p. 23.
AR 350–25, Civil Affairs Training, April 1967, p. 1.
WD TM 20–205, Dictionary of U.S. Army Terms, January 1944, p. 159.
If the title of a work is altered, other than shortened, in
subsequent references, add the phrase “hereafter cited as” at
the end of the first full citation.
C. Ford Worthington, ed., The Journals of the Continental
Congress, 1774–1789, 34 vols. (Washington, D.C.: Government
Printing Office, 1904–1937), 3:124 (hereafter cited as JCC).
8-2
8.6 Government publications and public documents. See 8.43 for
bibliographic format.
U.S. Congress, Senate, Committee on Judiciary, Contract
Hardship Claims: Hearings on S. 1947, 79th Cong., 2d sess., 1946,
p. 31.
U.S. Congress, Senate, Permanent Subcommittee on
Investigations of the Committee on Government Operations, Staff
Study of Major Riots and Civil Disorders—1965 Through July 31,
1968, 90th Cong., 2d sess., pp. 6–14.
U.S. Congress, Senate, Riots, Civil and Criminal Disorder,
Hearings Before the Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations of
the Committee on Government Operations, 90th Cong., 2d sess.,
91st Cong., 1st and 2d sess., 1967–1970 (25 pts. and 2 interim
Rpts), pt. 5, p. 1302.
Food Security Act of 1985, HR 2100, 99th Cong., 1st sess.,
Congressional Record 131 (8 October 1985): H 8461.
Transcript, Broadcast by Brig Gen Hudson Austin over Radio
Free Grenada, 19 Oct 83, approximately 2230, in Congressional
Record (27 March 1984): S 3729–S 3780.
U.S. Department of State, Trade Expansion Act of 1962,
Commercial Policy Series, no. 196, pp. 21–25.
8.7 CMH publications. As foreshadowed in 8.5, CMH books have
slightly more rules on citation: include the series title (not the
subseries) from the title page if the book is in a series, list the
publisher as U.S. Army Center of Military History (not Office
of the Chief of Military History because all CMH books have
been reprinted bearing that on the title page), but give the year
of the first printing (on the back of the title page), unless the
reprint edition referenced is an expansion or revision.
Brooks E. Kleber and Dale Birdsell, The Chemical Warfare
Service: Chemicals in Combat, United States Army in World War II
(Washington, D.C.: U.S. Army Center of Military History, 1966).
Richard W. Stewart, ed., American Military History, vol. 1, The
United States Army and the Forging of a Nation, 1775–1917, Army
Historical Series, 2d ed. (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Army Center of
Military History, 2009).
Christopher N. Koontz, ed., Enduring Voices: Oral Histories of
the U.S. Army Experience in Afghanistan, 2003–2005 (Washington,
D.C.: U.S. Army Center of Military History, 2008).
8-3
8.8 General form for periodicals. Author, “Article Title,” Periodical
Title Volume Number (Date [Month and Year, or Year only]):
Page Reference. See 8.40 for bibliographic format.
Alwyn Barr, “Confederate Artillery in the Trans-Mississippi,”
Military Affairs 27 (Summer 1963): 77.
Thomas E. DeShazo, “Field Artillery Missiles,” Army Information
Digest 11 (December 1956): 102–03.
Frank D. Grossman, “Artillery in Vietnam,” Ordnance 52
(November-December 1967): 270.
Peter T. Suzuki, “Analyses of Japanese Films in Wartime
Washington,” Asian Profile 23, no. 5 (1995): 371.
Note: Use an en dash to indicate a span of page numbers
(pp. 24–26). Use a hyphen to indicate the issue date of a
bimonthly publication (January-February 2006). Also note
space between colon and page number.
8.9 Newspapers and weekly publications. Do not cite page
numbers because these publications often undergo multiple
editions that may relocate specific items. Also abbreviate the
month but use the full year in the publication date. See 8.41
for bibliographic format.
Thomas E. Ricks, “Military Envisions Longer Stay in Iraq,”
Washington Post, 10 Jun 2007.
David McCullough, “History: 1776—Washington’s War,”
Newsweek, 15 May 2005.
Note: When referencing newspapers and periodicals in text,
the article the, even if part of the official title, is lowercased
and not italicized.
8.10 Ibid. Use “ibid.” when a subsequent note is identical to
the entire reference that precedes it. “Ibid.” (which means
“in the same place”) takes the place of the name(s) of the
author(s) or editor(s), the title of the work, and as much of
the succeeding material that is identical.
Janice E. McKenney, “More Bang for the Buck in the Interwar
Army,” Military Affairs 42 (April 1978): 80–86.
Ibid.
Ibid., p. 84.
8-4
8.11 Idem. Use “idem” when a subsequent citation in one footnote
repeats the author’s name from the preceding citation. Idem
(which means the same as previously mentioned) takes the
place of the name(s) of the author(s) or editor(s).
David W. Hogan Jr., U.S. Army Special Operations in World War
II (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Army Center of Military History, 1992),
p. 18; idem, A Command Post at War: First Army Headquarters
in Europe, 1943–1945 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Army Center of
Military History, 2000), p. 67.
Abbreviations, Punctuation, and Capitalization
8.12In footnotes, use established CMH abbreviation style for
ranks (see 1.50) and dates (see 6.3–5) without terminal
periods. However, when abbreviating states, use the longer
state abbreviation (see Table 4-1) followed by a period.
Lt Col
27 Sep 1968
Annapolis, Md.
8.13 Spell out acronyms and abbreviations at first use in footnotes.
(Note: Treat footnote content independently from the main
body of text; that is, spell out an acronym when first used
in the footnotes as well as its first use in the main text.)
Abbreviations used in footnotes must be consistent with those
used in the text (with the exception of terminal punctuation).
For common footnote and endnote abbreviations that do not
need to be introduced with the spelled out versions, see Table
8-1.
8.14Use a colon after sub (subject) and capitalize important
words, using authorized abbreviations. Cite the subject
exactly as it appears on the document. Do not abbreviate
or change punctuation or capitalization of the subject to
conform to the style guide. For footnote format of relevant
archival documents, see 8.20, 8.23. Do not abbreviate titles of
official circulars, orders, studies, monographs, reports, or the
like, at first mention.
Msg, Robert W. Komer to Corps Senior Advisers, 18 Jan 1968,
sub: Pacification Guidelines for 1968, DepCORDS files, CMH.
8-5
Table 8-1. Footnote and Endnote Abbreviations
Abbreviation
AAR
Abn
Anon.
Armd
Arty
Asst
Atty
Avn
Bde
Bfg
Bn
Br
Bull
Cav
Cdr
Ch
chg.
Cir
Cmd
Co
Conf
Corresp
Def
DF
Dir
Div
Encl
End
Engr
EO
f.
Fax
ff.
FO
GO
Gp
HQ
8-6
After Action Report
Airborne
Anonymous
Armored
Artillery
Assistant
Attorney
Aviation
Brigade
Briefing
Battalion
Branch
Bulletin
Cavalry
Commander
Chief
change
Circular
Command
Company
Conference
Correspondence
Defense
Disposition Form
Directive
Division
Enclosure
Endorsement
Engineer
Executive Order
and following page
Facsimile
and following pages
Field Orders
General Orders
Group
Headquarters
Term
Table 8-1. Footnote and Endnote Abbreviations (Continued)
Abbreviation
Inf
Intel
Interv
Jnl
Ltr
Mech
Memo
MFR
Mil
Min
Ms
Msg
Mtg
Ofc
Ofcr
Opn
ORLL
PL
Plt
PO
Rad
Rcd
Ret.
Rgt
Rpt
Sch
Sec
Sep
Sitrep
SO
Sqdn
SS
Sum
Suppl
Telecon
Telg
VTC
Term
Infantry
Intelligence
Interview
Journal
Letter
Mechanized
Memorandum
Memorandum for the Record
Military
Minutes
Manuscript
Message
Meeting
Office
Officer
Operation
Operational Report-Lessons Learned
Public Law
Platoon
Permanent Orders
Radiogram
Record
Retired
Regiment
Report
School
Secretary
Separate
Situation Report
Special Orders
Squadron
Summary Sheet/Staff Summary Sheet
Summary
Supplement/supplemental
Telephone Conversation
Telegram
Video Teleconference
8-7
8.15 Use semicolons to separate the entries when several citations
appear in a single note. The entries must appear in the same
order as the text material to which they pertain.
Birkhimer, Historical Sketch, pp. 84, 89–90; Tidball, “Remarks
upon Field Artillery,” pp. 22–24, Field Artillery (FA) School files;
Downey, Sound of the Guns, p. 147.
8.16Use a colon to introduce multiple sources documenting a
single passage or section.
Unless otherwise indicated, material in this chapter (section,
passage) is based on the following: Lyndon B. Johnson, The
Vantage Point: Perspectives of the Presidency, 1963–1969 (New
York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1971), pp. 388–97; William C.
Westmoreland, A Soldier Reports (New York: Doubleday, 1976),
pp. 298–301; MACV History, 1966, pp. 261–68.
8.17Abbreviate (and lowercase) parts of publications and
documents in footnotes, lists of references, and parentheses.
For abbreviations of parts of a publication, see 3.6.
8.18In footnotes only, it is permissible to abbreviate ranks for
four- or five-star generals and equivalent. For abbreviations
of military ranks, see 1.50.
8.19To avoid ambiguity, use the abbreviation no. only when
necessary.
8-8
Archival Material
8.20General form for archival material (smallest designation
to largest): Document type [including number or symbols],
writer [full name if possible in first cite] or issuing agency
[both, if known] to [if letter, or for, if memorandum] recipient
[individual or agency, or both if known], date, title [or subject
of letters, messages, memorandums, and so forth written as
“sub:”], file designation [exactly as on file], repository. Always
cite exact titles of archival collections.
Ltr, Col W. Barton Leach, Ch, Operations Analysis Division (OAD),
HQ, Army Air Forces (AAF), to Harvey H. Bundy, Special Asst to the
Sec War, Washington, 16 Jan 1945, Encl to Memo, sub: OA in the
AAF for the Next War and Between Wars, Folder OA, Entry 113,
1943–45, Rcds of the Office of the Secretary of War, Record Group
(RG) 107, National Archives, College Park, Md. (NACP).
Memo, Col Alfred W. DeQuoy, Ch, Strategy and Tactics Analysis
Group (STAG), for Lt Col Fisher, Mr. Onufrak, Dr. Ling, and Mr. Hurd,
Bethesda, Md., 14 Sep 1961, sub: Proposed Reorganization for FY
63–67, p. 2, Folder 201–22 DA Mobilization Program Planning Files,
Entry 100, 1961, Rcds of the Army Staff, RG 319, NACP.
DF, Brig Gen C. E. Hutchins Jr., Dir of Strategic Plans and
Policy, Deputy Ch of Staff for Military Operations (DCSOPS),
Headquarters, Department of the Army (HQDA), to Ch, STAG,
Washington, 21 Mar 1962, sub: Use of STAG IBM 7090 Computer
by U.S. Army Chemical Corps Operations Research Group, Folder
302–04 Alot Files, Entry 100, 1962, RG 319, NACP.
Msg, Commander, U.S. Military Assistance Command, Vietnam
(COMUSMACV), to Commander in Chief, Pacific (CINCPAC), 26
Aug 1966, sub: Concept of Military Operations in SVN, Historians
files, U.S. Army Center of Military History (CMH), Washington, D.C.
Msg, Gen William C. Westmoreland, COMUSMACV, MAC
8212 to Adm Ulysses S. G. Sharp, CINCPAC, 20 Sep 1966, sub:
Containment of Enemy Forces in Sanctuaries, Westmoreland
History files, 9-A-2, CMH.
E-mail, Col Robert M. Hensler (U.S. Army [USA], Ret.), to
author, 14 Aug 2007, Historians files, CMH.
8-9
With some documents, such as reports, there is not always a
recipient.
Rpt, 2d Bde, 9th Inf Div, 9 Dec 1967, sub: Intensified MRF
Operations, Encl 1, Historians files, CMH.
Shortened form may be used for subsequent entries within a
chapter.
Ltr, Leach to Bundy, 16 Jan 1945, sub: OA in the AAF for the
Next War and Between Wars.
Memo, DeQuoy for Fisher, Onufrak, Ling, and Hurd, 14 Sep
1961, sub: Proposed Reorganization for FY 63–67.
DF, Hutchins to Ch, STAG, 21 Mar 1962, sub: Use of STAG IBM
Computer by U.S. Army Chemical Corps Operations Research
Group.
Msg, COMUSMACV to CINCPAC, 26 Aug 1966, sub: Concept of
Military Operations in SVN.
Msg, Westmoreland MAC 8212 to Sharp, 20 Sep 1966, sub:
Containment of Enemy Forces in Sanctuaries.
E-mail, Hensler to author, 14 Aug 2007.
Rpt, 2d Bde, 9th Inf Div, 9 Dec 1967, sub: Intensified MRF
Operations, Encl 1.
Format for an interview is the following: Interv, interviewer
with interviewee, title [role relative to story], date(s) [day,
abbreviated month, full year], file information, repository.
Interv, Col Glenn A. Smith and Lt Col August M. Cianciolo with
Maj Gen Delk M. Oden, former Commanding General (CG), U.S.
Army Support Command, Vietnam, 27 May 1977, p. 20, Senior
Officer Oral History Program, U.S. Army Military History Institute
(MHI), Carlisle Barracks, Pa.
Interv, author with Col William E. LeGro, G–2, 1st Inf Div, 15 Jan
1976, Historians files, U.S. Army Center of Military History (CMH),
Washington, D.C.
Shortened form for an interview.
Interv, Smith and Cianciolo with Oden, 27 May 1977.
Interv, author with LeGro, 15 Jan 1976.
8-10
8.21The file information for archival documents from National
Archives and Records Administration facilities and affiliated
archives is (1) file unit, (2) series/subgroup, (3) record group,
and (4) repository and location. The principle used for
ordering this information is still from specific to general.
File unit: This is likely to be a numbered box, a folder, or a
number in the War Department Dewey Decimal System. If
possible, give the information on the box, not the box number.
Series and Subgroup: This information may include an Entry
number, a series number, or a general category of files.
Record Group: Record group name and number.
Repository: Repositories include National Archives and
Records Administration, Washington, D.C. (NADC);
National Archives, College Park, Md. (NACP); National
Personnel Records Center (NPRC), St. Louis, Mo.;
Washington National Records Center (WNRC), Suitland,
Md.; and Library of Congress (LC), Washington, D.C.
Training Memo 3, Ch, Army Field Forces (CofAFF), 18 Feb
1952, sub: Ranger Training, (1) box 527, (2) Entry A1 132, (3) Rcds
of U.S. Army Operational, Tactical, and Support Organizations
(World War II and Thereafter), Record Group (RG) 338, (4) National
Archives, College Park, Md. (NACP).
Weekly Log, 5 Jun 1942 entry, (1) box Activities 4/1/42 thru
6/30/42, R&D Activities: Gen Barnes, (2) Entry 646A, (3) Rcds of
the Chief of Ordnance, 1797–1988, RG 156, (4) NACP.
Memo, Brig Gen Edward G. Lansdale, Deputy Asst to the Sec
Def (Special Operations), for Asst Sec Army George H. Roderick,
21 Oct 1960, sub: Counter-Guerrilla Activities, in (1) 370.64, (2)
Chief of Staff, Army, (3) Rcds of the Army Staff, 1903–2009, RG
319, (4) NACP.
Listing as much of this information as possible is important
to aid the reader in the search to find the document; however,
that being stated, a researcher will seldom be able to walk into
the National Archives with a footnote and find the document
without first using a finding aid. If a document lacks some
of the required information, it is not necessary to record “no
sub” or “n.d.” or “writer unknown.”
8-11
8.22 Another form for unpublished documents that does not involve from
someone/agency to someone/agency: Document type, operation
covered [if provided or appropriate], issuing unit/organization,
period document covers [if provided], date of document, file
information, repository, and repository location. The following
examples are accepted formats for the listed documents.
Periodic Intel Rpt, Military Assistance Command, Vietnam
(MACV), Oct 1966, 20 Nov 1966, p. ix, Historians files, U.S. Army
Center of Military History (CMH), Washington, D.C.
Logistics Fact Book, MACV J–4, 1 Jun 1967, pp. 49, 51,
Historians files, CMH.
Daily Jnl, 1st Bn, 16th Inf, 17 Jun 1967, Historians files, CMH.
Intel Sum 20, 3d Bde, 25th Inf Div, 31 May 1967, Historians
files, CMH.
AAR, Opn Mallet, 2d Bde, 1st Inf Div, 7 Mar 1966, p. 5, box
1, 81/472, Rcds of U.S. Army Operational, Tactical, and Support
Organizations (World War II and Thereafter), Record Group (RG)
338, National Archives, College Park, Md. (NACP).
AAR, Opn at Thanh Binh Pass, Pleiku, and Kontum, 173d Abn
Bde (Sep), 13 Sep 1965, p. 14, Historians files, CMH.
Sitrep 116, HQ, Task Force Oregon, 14 Aug 1967, Historians
files, CMH.
Fragmentary Order (FRAGO) 3–2, Opn Francis Marion, 4th Inf
Div, 25 Apr 1967, Historians files, CMH.
Critique 7–67, Opn Junction City I, 1st Logistical Cmd, 30 Jun
1967, pp. 1–3, Historians files, CMH.
ORLL, 1 Nov 1966–31 Jan 1967, I FFV, 6 Mar 1967, pp. 16–18,
Historians files, CMH.
Operational Summary (Op Sum), Opn Maeng Ho 8, MACV–Military
History Branch (MHB), 12 Feb 1967, pp. 1–29, Historians files, CMH.
Operation Order (OPORD) 14–67, Opn Coronado, HQ, Mobile
Riverine Force (MRF), 26 Jun 1967, an. A, Historians files, CMH.
Annual Hist Sum, 1966, 1st Sqdn, 4th Cav, 7 May 1967, p. 2,
box 5, 81/469, RG 338, NACP.
Daily Personnel Sum, 1st Cav Div, 23 Sep 1950, Eighth U.S.
Army, RG 338, NACP.
Co Morning Rpts, 65th Inf, 22 Sep 1950, Mil Rcds Br, National
Personnel Records Center (NPRC), St. Louis, Mo.
An exception to the above rule is a command report. The
period covered precedes the issuing unit/organization.
Cmd Rpts, Jan–Jun 1952, 23d Inf, boxes 2835–38, RG 407, NACP.
Quarterly Cmd Rpt, 1 Jul–30 Sep 1965, 1st Bde, 101st Abn Div,
18 Oct 1965, p. 1, Historians files, CMH.
Monthly Cmd Rpt, Mar 1951, 65th Inf, Entry 429, Rcds of the
Adjutant General’s Office (AGO), RG 407, NACP.
8-12
8.23Format for General Orders (GO), Field Orders (FO),
bulletins, directives, and circulars is the following: issuing
headquarters, document and number, date, subject [sub:] if
one, repository, and repository location.
HQ, U.S. Army, Vietnam (USARV), GO 841, 8 Apr 1970, sub:
Award of the Valorous Unit Award, Historians files, U.S. Army
Center of Military History (CMH), Washington, D.C.
War Department (WD) GO 20, 30 Jan 1919, sub: Awards of
Medal of Honor, copy in CMH.
5th Div FO 10, 25 Jun 1918, copy in CMH.
II Corps FO 18, amendment 2, 2 Oct 1918, copy in CMH.
Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (MACV), Intel Bull 4594,
13 May 1967, Historians files, CMH.
Department of Defense (DoD) Dir 3025.12, 8 Jun 1968,
sub: Employment of Military Resources in the Event of Civil
Disturbances, copy in Historians files, CMH.
Headquarters, Department of the Army (HQDA), Cir 525–1, 20
Apr 1967, sub: Military Operations, Improvement of Civil Affairs
Capability, copy in Historians files, CMH.
8.24The general form for unpublished studies and monographs
is the following: Author [if one is mentioned], title, study
number (location of the organization that initiated the study:
organization that initiated the study, completion date), file
information, repository. This follows the same format as
books, the only difference is the title is not italic and file and
repository information must be supplied.
Regimental History of the Sixty-fifth Infantry, 1941, Entry 427,
Rcds of the AGO, RG 407, National Archives, College Park, Md.
(NACP).
Participation of Puerto Ricans in the Armed Services with
Emphasis on World War I, World War II, and the Korean War (13
Aug 1965), GEOG G 314.7, sec. 1, p. 2, U.S. Army Center of
Military History (CMH), Washington, D.C.
Robert W. Coakley, Paul J. Scheips, and Vincent H. Demma,
Use of Troops in Civil Disturbances Since World War II, 1945–1965,
OCMH Study 83, rev. ed. (Washington, D.C.: Office of the Chief of
Military History, 1971), CMH.
General Headquarters, Supreme Commander for the Allied
Powers (SCAP), History of the Nonmilitary Activities of the
Occupation of Japan, 1952, pp. 1–9, CMH.
Luigi Einaudi and Alfred Stepan, Latin American Institutional
Development: Changing Military Perspectives in Peru and Brazil,
R-586-DOS (Santa Monica, Calif.: RAND, 1971), pp. 25–26.
8-13
8.25 Footnote form for dissertations, theses, lectures, and speeches.
For bibliographic format, see 8.44.
Norman M. Cary, “The Use of Motor Vehicles in the United
States Army, 1899–1939” (Ph.D. diss., University of Georgia, 1980).
Gerald P. Stadler, “Artillery Employment in the Civil War”
(Master’s thesis, Duke University, 1968).
William Moore, “The Hukbalahap Insurgency, 1948–1954: An
Analysis of the Roles, Missions, and Doctrine of the Philippine
Military Forces” (Student thesis, Army War College [AWC], 1971).
Gen Andrew O’Meara, “CINCSOUTH Plans and Problems”
(Lecture, AWC, 13 Dec 1963), U.S. Army Military History Institute
(MHI), Carlisle Barracks, Pa.
Maj Gen George Eckhardt, “Commanding General’s Talk to
Commanders of the 9th Infantry Division upon Arrival in Vietnam”
(Speech, c. Dec 1966–Jan 1967), Historians files, U.S. Army Center
of Military History (CMH), Washington, D.C.
Gen George H. Decker, “The Military Aspects of the Cold War”
(Speech, National Security Seminar, AWC, 8 Jun 1961).
8.26General form for courses and course material: kind of
document [if relevant], name of course, course number, school
name, date or period of course, file information, repository.
Course Material, Security and Defense Measures in Rear Areas,
1953, Transportation School, Historians files, U.S. Army Center of
Military History (CMH), Washington, D.C.
Addendum to Lesson IV–50, History of Military Art Course,
U.S. Military Academy (USMA), 1962–1963, p. 9, in Department of
Military Arts and Engineering, Organizational History, Program of
Instruction (POI) files, USMA, West Point, N.Y.
Counterinsurgency I, Infantry Career Course 313, Infantry
School, Oct 1964, p. 1, Infantry School Library, Fort Benning, Ga.
Counterinsurgency II, Infantry Career Subcourse 497, Infantry
School, Apr 1965, p. 3, Infantry School Library.
Lesson Plan A4600/9, Antiguerrilla Operations in a Local
War, Command and General Staff College, 1958–1959, p. I-4-1,
Combined Arms Research Library (CARL), Fort Leavenworth,
Kans.
POI, Military Government Advanced Course, Provost Marshal
General’s School, Camp Gordon, Ga., Nov 1954, Historians files,
CMH.
8-14
8.27When citing multiple primary source documents in one
footnote from the same record group for the first time, list
the record group and archives information at the end of the
footnote. Introduce the name of the record group at its first
mention and thereafter simply cite the record group and
archive information in an abbreviated form.
Annual Hist Sum, 1966, 1st Sqdn, 4th Cav, 7 May 1967, p. 2,
box 5, 81/469; AAR, Opn Mallet, 2d Bde, 1st Inf Div, 7 Mar 1966, p.
5, box 1, 81/472; Quarterly Cmd Rpt, 1 May–31 Jul 1965, 173d Abn
Bde (Sep), 15 Aug 1965, pp. 3–4, box 49, 73A/3330. All in Rcds of
U.S. Army Operational, Tactical, and Support Organizations (World
War II and Thereafter), Record Group (RG) 338, National Archives,
College Park, Md. (NACP).
but subsequent mentions
Annual Hist Sum, 1966, 1st Sqdn, 4th Cav, 7 May 1967, p. 2;
AAR, Opn Mallet, 2d Bde, 1st Inf Div, 7 Mar 1966, p. 5; Quarterly
Cmd Rpt, 1 May–31 Jul 1965, 173d Abn Bde (Sep), 15 Aug 1965,
pp. 3–4; Personnel Daily Sum, 1st Cav Div, 23 Sep 1950, Eighth
U.S. Army, RG 338, NACP.
World Wide Web References and Digital Document Collections
8.28With the advent of the World Wide Web, the Internet has
become an increasingly important tool for historical research.
However, because Internet content is inherently transient and
impermanent, citing electronic sources is discouraged. If an
Internet source is used in a CMH book or monograph, the
author is required to print the reference, retain that printed copy
as part of the author’s permanent research record, and cite it as
“Historians files, CMH”; see 8.33.
8.29When citing a URL (universal resource locator) address in
less formal text, such as articles, reports, information papers,
and memorandums, do not underline or italicize the reference
and include the full URL.
http://www.history.army.mil
http://www.opm.gov/veterans/html/vetsinfo.asp
8-15
8.30 Page numbers. If a book or article has been published in hard
copy as well as online, it probably will be paginated. Often, Web
articles and content will not be broken into distinct pages and,
if the body of the work is lengthy and the relevant material
is in the middle, it will be impossible to list a page number in
the citation. To assist the researcher in wading through to the
pertinent information, a writer should consider citing in the
footnote one or both of the following: 1) a “saved as” name
if the document cannot easily be located by its title, such as
“saved as IDR_Operation_Polaris_(U)”; 2) a keyword to use in
searching the document, such as “search on keyword: Kelsey.”
Put this information in the place that would be occupied by a
page number.
8.31 Books, articles, and other material published online. Books,
articles, and other publications are treated as if they are
being cited as printed hard-copy editions. The data on author
and publisher may not fit the normal pattern, but sufficient
information should be given to identify the document.
Hazel V. Clark, Mesopotamia: Between Two Rivers
(Mesopotamia, Ohio: Trumbull County Historical Society, 1957).
Christopher Prawdzik, “Posse Comitatus Hits the Spotlight,” 31
Jul 2002, Newsroom Web site, National Guard Association of the
United States, http://www.ngaus.org, copy in Historians files, CMH.
Matthew Carlton Hammond, “The Posse Comitatus Act: A
Principle in Need of Renewal,” 75 Wash. U.L.Q. (Washington
University Law Quarterly) 953, copy in Historians files, CMH.
“Patrol Base Kelsey named for fallen soldier,” Army Times.com,
27 Dec 2007, copy in Historians files, CMH.
8-16
8.32 Citations of Web site content. For original content from online
sources other than formally published documents, include as
much of the following as possible: the author of the content;
the title or description of the content; the owner or sponsor of
the site, if it is not obvious from the URL; and a URL. Also
include a publication date or date of revision or modification;
if no such date can be determined, include an access date.
Russell C. Jacobs, Biography of Rear Adm. Andrew Carl
Bennett, U.S. Navy, posted at http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/
acbennett.htm, copy in Historians files, CMH.
Crusader 155mm Self Propelled Howitzer, USA, accessed 30
January 2009, http://www.army-technology.com, copy in Historians
files, CMH.
Frontline Interview: Douglas MacGregor, posted 26 October
2004, accessed 7 September 2009, http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/
pages/frontline, copy in Historians files, CMH.
About IMCOM, History, accessed 4 September 2009, http://www
.imcom.army.mil, copy in Historians files, CMH.
Historians Files
8.33 In the course of conducting research on a volume, the author
will often accumulate a considerable body of material that
he or she will want to cite as supporting evidence. This
material may consist of personal and official correspondence
about the manuscript, interviews, Internet sources, diaries of
participants, and other documents written by or sent to the
author. The author should indicate in the bibliography where
this personal material will be retired, such as “Historians
files, CMH.”
8-17
Bibliography
The bibliography often includes a narrative portion followed
by individual sections that serve to organize the bibliographic
material. These sections may be titled Books, Articles, Government
Publications, Unpublished Works, and the like. One of these
sections should also detail the various archival collections used in
writing the historical work.
Books
8.34 General form for books. Author [last name first]. Title. Series
title [for CMH books—non-CMH books okay too but not
necessary—and do not include CMH subseries]. Place [City,
State]: Publisher [exception to rule: for Office of the Chief of
Military History, use U.S. Army Center of Military History],
Year [of first printing, unless reprint edition is expanded or
revised].
Blumenson, Martin. Salerno to Cassino. United States Army in
World War II. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Army Center of Military
History, 1969.
Clark, Wesley. Winning Modern Wars: Iraq, Terrorism, and the
American Empire. New York: Public Affairs, 2003.
Howard, Michael, ed. The Laws of War: Constraints on Warfare in
the Western World. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press,
1994.
Kitano, Harry H. L. Japanese Americans: The Evolution of a
Subculture, 2d ed. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1976.
McNaughton, James C. Nisei Linguists: Japanese Americans in the
Military Intelligence Service During World War II. Washington,
D.C.: Department of the Army, 2006.
Military History Institute of Vietnam. Victory in Vietnam: The Official
History of the People’s Army of Vietnam, 1954–1965. Translated
by Merle L. Pribbenow. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas,
2002.
8-18
8.35 Two or three authors. First author [last name first], subsequent
authors [first name first].
Grathwol, Robert P., and Donita M. Moorhus. Building for Peace:
U.S. Army Engineers in Europe, 1945–1991. U.S. Army in
the Cold War. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Army Center of Military
History, 2005.
Hosmer, Stephen T., Konrad Kellen, and Brian M. Jenkins. The
Fall of South Vietnam: Statements by Vietnamese Military and
Civilian Leaders. New York: Crane, Russak & Co., 1980.
Scales, Robert H. Jr., and Williamson Murray. The Iraq War: A
Military History. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press,
2003.
8.36 More than three authors. First author [last name first] followed
by “et al.” For using punctuation with “et al.,” see 2.23.
Briscoe, Charles H., et al. Weapon of Choice: U.S. Army Special
Forces in Afghanistan. Fort Leavenworth, Kans.: Combat
Studies Institute Press, 2004.
Stouffer, Samuel A., et al. The American Soldier, vol. 1, Adjustment
During Army Life. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press,
1949.
8.37 Chapter in a book.
Love, Robert W. Jr. “Fighting a Global War, 1941–45.” In In Peace
and War: Interpretations of American Naval History, 1775–
1984, 2d ed. Edited by Kenneth J. Hagan. Westport, Conn.:
Greenwood Press, 1984.
or
Howard, Michael, ed. The Laws of War: Constraints on Warfare in the
Western World. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 1994,
ch. 3.
Kissinger, Henry A. Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy. Boulder,
Colo.: Westview Press, 1984, chs. 2, 12.
8.38 Multivolume works.
Calvocoressi, Peter, Guy Wint, and John Pritchard. Total War, vol.
2, The Greater East Asia and Pacific Conflict, rev. 2d ed. New
York: Pantheon, 1989.
Morison, Samuel E. History of U.S. Naval Operations in World War
II, 15 vols. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2001–2002, vols.
1, 3, 4.
8-19
8.39 In-text references. Use the following form when citing
published works in running text, such as in a bibliographic
narrative. For periodicals, see 8.42.
William A. Ganoe’s The History of the United Stated Army, rev. ed.
(New York: D. Appleton-Century Co., 1943), gives a thorough
analysis of the issue.
Periodicals
8.40 General form for periodicals. Author [last name first]. “Article
Title.” Periodical Title Volume Number (Date [Month and
Year, or Year only]): Page Reference [full range].
Barr, Alwyn. “Confederate Artillery in the Trans-Mississippi.” Military
Affairs 27 (Summer 1963): 77–83.
DeShazo, Thomas E. “Field Artillery Missiles.” Army Information
Digest 11 (December 1956): 102–07.
Grossman, Frank D. “Artillery in Vietnam.” Ordnance 52
(November-December 1967): 270.
Suzuki, Peter T. “Analyses of Japanese Films in Wartime
Washington.” Asian Profile 23, no. 5 (1995): 371–80.
8.41 Newspapers and weekly publications.
McCullough, David. “History: 1776—Washington’s War.”
Newsweek, 15 May 2005.
Ricks, Thomas E. “Military Envisions Longer Stay in Iraq.”
Washington Post, 10 Jun 2007.
8.42 In-text references. Use the following form when citing
published works in running text, such as in a bibliographic
narrative. For books, see 8.39.
Edwin W. Kenworthy’s “The Case Against Army Segregation,”
Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
275 (1951): 27–33, . . . .
8-20
Government Publications
8.43General format for public and executive department
documents.
U.S. Congress. House. Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs.
Fire Island National Seashore, N.Y.: Report to Accompany H.R.
7107. 88th Cong., 2d sess., 1964, H. Rpt. 1638, p. 6.
U.S. Congress. House. Congressional Record. 77th Cong., 1st
sess., 1 July 1945, p. 88. (If daily edition.)
U.S. Congress. Senate. Committee on Judiciary. War Contract
Hardship Claims: Hearings on S. 1947. 79th Cong., 2d sess.,
1946, p. 31.
U.S. Department of State. Trade Expansion Act of 1962.
Commercial Policy Series, no. 196, pp. 21–25.
Unpublished Works
8.44When citing unpublished works (such as a dissertations,
theses, lectures, and speeches), follow the same general format
as for periodicals; see 8.8. For footnote format, see 8.25.
Cary, Norman Miller. “The Use of Motor Vehicles in the United
States Army, 1899–1939.” Ph.D. diss., University of Georgia,
1980.
Decker, Gen George H. “The Military Aspects of the Cold War.”
Speech, National Security Seminar, Army War College (AWC), 8
Jun 1961.
Eckhardt, Maj Gen George. “Commanding General’s Talk to
Commanders of the 9th Infantry Division upon Arrival in
Vietnam.” Speech, c. Dec 1966–Jan 1967.
Moore, William. “The Hukbalahap Insurgency, 1948–1954: An
Analysis of the Roles, Missions, and Doctrine of the Philippine
Military Forces.” Student thesis, AWC, 1971.
O’Meara, Gen Andrew. “CINCSOUTH Plans and Problems.”
Lecture, AWC, 13 Dec 1963.
Stadler, Gerald Philip. “Artillery Employment in the Civil War.”
Master’s thesis, Duke University, 1968.
8-21
Arrangement of Entries
8.45 A single-author entry precedes a multiauthor entry beginning
with the same name.
Brodie, Bernard. War and Politics. New York: Macmillan, 1973.
Brodie, Bernard, and Fawn M. Brodie. From Crossbow to H-Bomb,
rev. ed. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1973.
8.46List successive multiauthor entries alphabetically by the
coauthors’ last names.
Elisseeff, Serge, Hugh Borton, and Edwin O. Reischauer, eds. A
Selected List of Books and Articles on Japan in English, French,
and German. Washington, D.C.: Committee on Japanese
Studies, American Council of Learned Societies, 1940.
Elisseeff, Serge, and Edwin O. Reischauer. Elementary Japanese
for University Students. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard-Yenching
Institute, 1941.
8.47 Use a 3-em dash followed by a period to represent the same
author or editor named in the immediately preceding entry;
see 2.47.
Doughty, Robert A. The Breaking Point: Sedan and the Fall of
France, 1940. Hamden, Conn.: Archon Books, 1990.
———. The Seeds of Disaster: The Development of French Army
Doctrine, 1919–1939. Hamden, Conn.: Archon Books, 1985.
Note: The 3-em dash replaces all authors’ names, not simply
the first author. Therefore, when using the 3-em dash, the
authors listed for each work must match exactly; that is, the
same authors listed in the same order.
8-22
9
Front and Back Matter
I cannot live without books.—Thomas Jefferson
CMH publications typically fall into one of three categories: books,
monographs, and brochures (or pamphlets). Each publication is
composed of three main parts: front matter, main body, and back
matter. However, the information included in each of these parts
will vary primarily on the basis of the type of publication.Books
and Monographs
Front Matter
9.1 Order front matter as follows: half title, frontispiece, title,
Library of Congress (LOC) Cataloging-in-Publication (CIP)
data, Advisory Committee, dedication, contents, foreword,
author bio, preface, second half title. No one work will
likely include all these elements. This section explains which
elements are optional and which are mandatory under certain
circumstances (see Table 9-1) and also provides pagination
guidance.
9.2 Front matter pages are numbered with lowercase roman
numerals starting with the half title page (or title page), which
is page i. All front matter pages are counted; however, page
numbers do not appear on the half title, frontispiece, LOC
CIP data, the dedication, or any blank pages.
9-1
Table 9-1. Book and Monograph Organization
Part
(in order of appearance)
Front Matter
Half title
Frontispiece, series title, or blank
Title page
LOC CIP data page
Advisory Committee page
Dedication
Contents
Tables
Charts
Maps
Illustrations
Photo Credits
Foreword
Author Bio
Preface (Acknowledgments)
Second half title
Text
First text page
(Introduction or Chapter 1)
Back Matter
Appendixes
Bibliography or Further Readings
Abbreviations or Glossary
Map Symbols
Index
Y = Yes, N = No, O = Optional
recto = right-hand page (odd numbered)
verso = left-hand page (even numbered)
9-2
Book
Monograph
Page Number
O
O
Y
Y
O
O
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
O
N
N
Y
Y
N
O
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
O
i
ii
iii
iv
v
recto
recto
recto or verso
recto or verso
recto or verso
recto or verso
recto or verso
recto
verso or recto
recto
recto
Y
Y
1
O
Y
O
O
Y
O
O
O
O
O
recto
recto
recto
recto
recto
9.3 Half Title Page (optional). The half title page contains only
the title of the book without the edition number, author’s
name, or CMH imprint (see Figure 9-1).
9.4 Frontispiece (optional). The frontispiece is an illustration
that appears on the reverse side (verso) of the title page. If
there is no frontispiece, this page is blank (see Figure 9-2).
9.5 Title Page. The title page carries the full title, author’s name,
edition number, publisher’s name (usually CMH, but on
occasion may be another agency name), place of publication
(city and state), and year (see Figure 9-3). The title page
also includes the series name, if applicable, and, unless the
publication is a campaign brochure or a Department of the
Army Historical Summary, the seal of Military Instruction.
Note: Always drop the end-of-line punctuation (comma or
colon) in display type. This rule applies to chapter titles on
the opening page of each chapter as well as the book’s title on
the title and half title pages.
9.6 LOC CIP Data Page. The LOC CIP data page is sometimes
called the copyright page; however, because CMH publications
are in the public domain, they are not copyrighted. CMH
books are cataloged by the Library of Congress and, as such,
must contain the LOC CIP data. To obtain the CIP data,
the CMH Historical Products Branch submits electronically
requisite portions of a manuscript to the Library of Congress
CIP Division, which then creates a bibliographic record that
includes information as to whether this is the first printing
of the book and the year (which is updated for subsequent
printings), and the CMH Publication (Pub) number. This
page may also include a statement as to whether the book
is available for sale by the U.S. Government Printing Office
(GPO) and the 10-digit ISBN (International Standard Book
Number) assigned by GPO (see Figure 9-4).
9-3
9.7 Advisory Committee Page. CMH works that are published
under the purview of the Department of the Army Historical
Advisory Committee (DAHAC) must include this page,
which lists the sitting committee members at the time the
work is sent to GPO for printing. The Advisory Committee
page also includes the names of the chief of military history,
the chief historian, and the appropriate CMH division chief
(see Figure 9-5).
9.8 Dedication or Epigraph (optional). An epigraph is a quotation
relevant to the book. If an epigraph is used, the source is
given beneath it.
9.9 Contents. The table of contents is simply headed Contents,
not Table of Contents or List of Contents. It includes page
references for the front matter (such as the foreword, the author
page, and preface), chapter (or section) titles and subheads as
appropriate, and back matter. Do not use Continued in the
Contents even though subheads from a chapter carry over
from one page to the next. It also includes the following lists
(in order): tables, charts, maps, illustrations, and photo or art
credits (see Figure 9-6). The photo descriptions listed under
Illustrations should be cap and lowercase, with only the
beginning word and proper nouns in the descriptions to have
initial caps. Ensure that facing pages align at the bottom.
9.10 Foreword. Each volume must have a foreword signed by the
chief of military history (or chief historian), giving a brief
account of the volume and (if applicable) its place in the
series of which it is a part. It should be dated as of the date
the manuscript is sent to GPO for printing. If a book carries a
co-imprint with another agency (such as TRADOC or Cadet
Command), the foreword may be signed jointly by the chief
of military history (or chief historian) and the director of the
co-imprinting agency (see Figure 9-7).
Signature Block. Using two lines for the name and title in
the signature block, align left the first letters of each line and
flush right to the margin the longer of the two lines. Set the
signer’s name in all caps (see Figure 9-7).
9.11 Author Bio. Most volumes will carry a biographical note
about the author (see Figure 9-8).
9-4
9.12 Preface. The author’s preface should set forth the scope and
purpose of the work. It should state any limitations imposed
by the subject matter or sources and should include a statement
of the author’s responsibility for the content. If significant
methodological issues are involved, the methods of research
and the organization of the material in the volume should be
explained. In cases of multiple authors, the preface will clarify
the authorship of specific portions of the volume (see Figure
9-9).
Acknowledgments should be made to those who contributed
information used in the work, facilitated the gathering of such
information, aided in revisions, or contributed materially to
the processing of the book. The preface can call attention
to specific pages, such as glossary and bibliography and
can explain terms or concepts that are recurrent and are of
particular importance in the text.
The preface should be dated as of the date the manuscript is
sent to GPO for printing.
Back Matter
9.13 Appendixes (optional). Appendixes usually provide
additional information about topics covered in the main text
or data used to reach the conclusions drawn in the text. If
there is more than one appendix, they are labeled Appendix
A, Appendix B, and so on, and given individual titles. If there
is only one appendix, it is labeled Appendix.
9.14 Bibliography. The scope of a bibliography depends on the
type of publication. The bibliography in a major volume most
often has a narrative portion and separate comprehensive
sections, covering the various archival collections used; and
the primary books, primary articles, secondary books, and
secondary articles relied on in writing the book. A monograph
may also have an annotated bibliography, which includes a
description of the source after each entry.
9.15 Glossary (optional). A volume may include an alphabetized
glossary of technical terms, code names, and abbreviations
and acronyms.
9-5
9.16 Map Symbol Page (optional). If the work includes maps
containing various military symbols (especially from
earlier eras), include a map symbol page to aid the reader’s
understanding of the maps.
Brochures and Pamphlets
9.17Lengthier brochures and pamphlets will often contain the
following pieces:
• Title page (page i, no folio)
• Copyright page (bears cover caption and CMH Pub
number) (page ii, no folio)
• Contents page (page iii)
• Introduction, which is similar in content to the foreword
and signed by the chief of military history or the chief
historian (see 9.10). The author’s name appears only in the
introduction (page v).
• Half title page (optional) (page vii)
• Main body of text (page 1)
• Selected Bibliography or Further Readings
9.18 Pagination. Commemorative brochures are generally printed
with a self-cover using the same paper stock throughout. The
Introduction appears on the first right-hand (recto) page and
is numbered as page 3. The main body of text begins on the
second recto page and is page 5. If the brochure is larger and
does not use a self-cover, it will likely follow the organization
and pagination outlined in 9.17.
9.19 Bibliography. A brochure or pamphlet usually has a selected
bibliography (grouped by subject and not referenced in the
narrative) or a further readings list that provides additional
information on the topic discussed. This list begins on the
first recto page following the end of the main text.
9-6
Figure 9-1. Half Title Page
9-7
Figure 9-2. Frontispiece
9-8
Figure 9-3. Title Page
9-9
Figure 9-4. LOC CIP Data Page
9-10
Figure 9-5. Advisory Committee Page
9-11
Figure 9-6. Table of Contents
9-12
9-13
9-14
9-15
Figure 9-7. Foreword
9-16
Figure 9-8. Author Bio
9-17
Figure 9-9. Preface
9-18
9-19
9-20
9-21
10
Indexes
If you don’t find it in the index, look very carefully through
the entire catalogue.—Sears, Roebuck, and Co., Consumer’s
Guide, 1897
General
10.1
Do not index maps, charts, tables, picture captions, front
matter, appendixes, or other back matter.
10.2
Index discursive footnotes; but do not index footnotes
giving only reference citations. When referencing a
discursive footnote, use the page number followed by an
“n” and the footnote number. Use “nn” to indicate more
than one footnote on that page. Do not italicize “n” and do
not insert spaces within the reference.
134n2 [page 134, note 2]
134nn2–5 [page 134, notes 2 through 5]
168nn86,88 [page 168, notes 86 and 88]
If the page already appears under that main entry, do not
index the footnote. The reader will review the entire page,
including the footnotes, for the item’s information.
Casualties, enemy, 67, 81, 97
not
Casualties, enemy, 67, 81, 97, 97n63
10.3
Index all people, geographic place names, and military
units. However, incidental mentions of people and places
need not be indexed.
10.4
Index should follow the capitalization, spelling, accents,
and italics style of the work being indexed.
10.5
Capitalize the initial letter of the first word of each main
entry. In subentries, capitalize or lowercase entries to
conform to the capitalization style followed in text.
10-1
10.6
Index officers by the highest rank given in text.
10.7
Do not list officer or civilian position titles with a name;
use a cross-reference instead.
Chief of Staff, U.S. Army. See Casey, General George W. Jr.
Casey, General George W. Jr.
President, U.S. See Bush, George H. W.
Bush, George H. W.
10.8
Avoid beginning a main entry with a preposition.
10.9
Main entries having fewer than six page references need
not be broken into subentries.
10.10 There must be at least two subentries under a main entry.
10.11 Locators (page numbers) that appear in subentries should
not be duplicated immediately after the main entry.
Yempuku, Capt. Ralph T., 141, 286, 291, 347, 377
occupation of Japan, 436–37
surrender of Japan, 400–401, 403
not
Yempuku, Capt. Ralph T., 141, 286, 291, 347, 377, 400–401, 403, 436–37
occupation of Japan, 436–37
Pacific campaigns, 286, 291, 347, 377
10.12 For the reader’s convenience, use cross-references liberally.
Double-post subentries also as main entries.
Chinese-language program, 315–16
...
Fort Snelling, Minn., 299–329
Chinese-language program, 315–16
10-2
10.13 Index by paragraph not by an individual item’s appearance
on a page. For example, Maj. Gen. Leonard T. Gerow’s
name appears on page 97, not on page 98, but the paragraph,
and therefore the discussion, carries over to page 98. The
reader is interested in the entire discussion and its relation
to Gerow. As a result, he and all the other people, places,
and things indexed in that paragraph should follow the
example below.
Gerow, Maj. Gen. Leonard T., 97–98
If Gerow appears only on the top of page 98, the end of
the carried-over paragraph, the entry should be the same
as mentioned above because the reader, again, is interested
in the entire discussion.
Alphabetizing
10.14 Use the letter-by-letter system for alphabetizing indexes in
which the alphabetizing continues up to the first space or
punctuation mark and then starts again after that point.
For letter-number combinations, see 10.18. For units, see
10.22–33.
10.15 Do not consider prepositions and articles (such as of and
of the) when alphabetizing main entries.
Dellums, Ronald V.
Department of the Army
Department of the Army Realignment Task Force
Department of Defense
10.16 Terminate alphabetizing at a space, hyphen, comma, or
slash.
Air forces
Air raids
Air support
Aircraft, manufacture of
Aircraft armament
10.17 When a subentry begins with a preposition or a connective,
do not consider the preposition or connective in
alphabetizing. Otherwise, alphabetize subentries in same
manner as for main entries.
10-3
10.18 Main entries that begin with a letter and a number should
appear at the beginning of entries for that letter.
B–17s
B–26s
B–29s
Base facilities
10.19 Names with “Mc” or “Mac.” Names with “Mc” or “Mac”
are alphabetized letter by letter as the name is spelled.
MacArthur
Machine gun
Mackenzie
Macmillian
McAllister
McCullough
McNeil
10.20 Names with “Saint.” “Saint” names are alphabetized letter
by letter as the name is spelled. (Cross-reference if Saint
and St. are far apart in the index.)
Sabotage
Saint, General Crosbie
San Francisco
Santa Barbara
Saratoga
St. Cloud
St. Michael
Stammering
10.21 Names with “O.” Names beginning with “O” are
alphabetized as if the apostrophe were not there.
Odierno
O’Donnell
Onassis
O’Neil
Ono
10-4
Units
10.22 General rules for units. Organize units as main entries by branch
or function (Airborne, Armor, Armored, Armored Cavalry,
Artillery, Aviation, Battlefield Surveillance, Cavalry, Engineer,
Field Artillery, Fires, Infantry, Maintenance, Maneuver
Enhancement, Military Intelligence, Military Police, Ordnance,
Quartermaster, Signal, Support, Sustainment, Transportation,
and more), then by size (largest to smallest—divisions,
brigades or brigade combat teams, regiments, battalions or
squadrons, and companies or troops or batteries. Subentries
are to be organized numerically (if companies or troops or
batteries, alphabetically). For the treatment of branches that
are organized as regiments, see 10.23, 10.25. For the treatment
of branches not organized as regiments, see 10.26, 10.27. For
an example of how to handle the 10th Mountain Division, see
10.29. When in doubt, please call the project editor for advice.
10.23 For branches that are organized as regiments—specifically
Armor, Armored Cavalry, Artillery, Aviation (post-1987),
Cavalry, and Infantry—the parent units should also be
listed. The following is an example of unit organization
for a history that takes place prior to the Vietnam War
(1958–1973). For Vietnam War–era histories and later, do
not include a listing of regiments.
Infantry Divisions
1st
4th
9th
25th
Infantry Brigade Combat Teams
1st, 1st Infantry Division
2d, 1st Infantry Division
Infantry Brigades [also those that are separate]
1st, 4th Infantry Division
3d, 9th Infantry Division
196th [a separate brigade with no parent division]
Infantry regiments
2d
8th
9th
12th
28th
10-5
Infantry Battalions
1st, 2d Infantry
1st, 8th Infantry
1st, 12th Infantry
2d, 2d Infantry
2d, 28th Infantry
4th, 9th Infantry
Infantry Companies
A, 1st Battalion, 8th Infantry
A, 2d Battalion, 28th Infantry
B, 1st Battalion, 12th Infantry
For the same units in a history that takes place after October
2005, the basic organization is the same as other post–
Vietnam War histories (regiments are not listed), except
the names of the units will be slightly different. At this
time, Regiment becomes part of the official designation.
See 10.24 for advice on identifying the size of a unit and on
the use of Regiment in a unit’s official designation.
Infantry Divisions
1st
4th
9th
25th
See also Mountain Division, 10th; Special Troops Battalions.
Infantry Brigade Combat Teams
1st, 1st Infantry Division
2d, 1st Infantry Division
See also Special Troops Battalions.
Infantry Brigades [also those that are separate]
1st, 4th Infantry Division
3d, 9th Infantry Division
196th [a separate brigade with no parent division]
Infantry Battalions
1st, 2d Infantry Regiment
1st, 8th Infantry Regiment
1st, 12th Infantry Regiment
2d, 2d Infantry Regiment
2d, 28th Infantry Regiment
4th, 9th Infantry Regiment
Infantry Companies
A, 1st Battalion, 8th Infantry Regiment
A, 2d Battalion, 28th Infantry Regiment
B, 1st Battalion, 12th Infantry Regiment
10-6
10.24 Identifying the size of units. The first time a unit is
mentioned in the text, its official designation will be given
in full. A unit will have its size as part of its name (such as
25th Infantry Division, 173d Airborne Brigade, and 70th
Engineer Battalion) and its size will be in every mention.
Regiment is the exception. Regiment is omitted in unit
names prior to 1 October 2005. Much depends on the
time period in which the unit is discussed. Follow carefully
the way the unit is cited in the text, and index it as it first
appears. For units larger than division, see 10.32.
Pre–1 October 2005 regiment examples
69th Armor
9th Cavalry
9th Infantry
Occasionally, regiment will be added to these names, but it
will always be lowercased.
Note: The 75th Ranger Regiment is an exception to the
rule and has regiment as part of its official designation
prior to 1 October 2005.
Post–1 October 2005 regiment examples
227th Aviation Regiment
2d Cavalry Regiment
2d Infantry Regiment
10.25 For units smaller than division that are in branches
organized as regiments, see also 10.23. These units will be
indicated in full (which means the parent units will be cited
as well) when they are first mentioned. For Special Troops
Battalions, see 10.28. The templates for pre–October 2005
units are
for brigade combat teams: Ordinal [of Brigade Combat Team],
Division (3d, 1st Infantry Division)
for brigades: Ordinal [of Brigade], Division (3d, 1st Infantry
Division)
for squadrons, such as airmobile: Ordinal [of Squadron],
regiment (1st, 9th Cavalry)
for battalions: Ordinal [of Battalion], regiment (1st, 5th Artillery)
for companies: Letter [of Company], Battalion, regiment (C, 2d
Battalion, 327th Infantry)
for batteries, such as artillery: Letter [of Battery], Battalion,
regiment (B, 2d Battalion, 33d Artillery)
for troops, such as airmobile or armored cavalry: Letter [of
Troop], Squadron, regiment (C, 3d Squadron, 4th Cavalry)
10-7
The templates for post–October 2005 units are
for brigade combat teams: Ordinal [of Brigade Combat Team],
Division (3d, 1st Infantry Division)
for brigades: Ordinal [of Brigade], Division (3d, 1st Infantry
Division)
for squadrons, such as airmobile: Ordinal [of Squadron],
Regiment (1st, 9th Cavalry Regiment)
for battalions: Ordinal [of Battalion], Regiment (1st, 5th Artillery
Regiment)
for companies: Letter [of Company], Battalion, Regiment (C, 2d
Battalion, 327th Infantry Regiment)
for batteries, such as artillery: Letter [of Battery], Battalion,
Regiment (B, 2d Battalion, 33d Artillery Regiment)
for troops, such as airmobile or armored cavalry: Letter [of
Troop], Squadron, Regiment (C, 3d Squadron, 4th Cavalry
Regiment)
Note: For separate brigades that were created as part of
the Army’s transformation to a modular force (beginning
in 2005), see 10.27. For the Special Troops Battalion, see
10.28.
10.26 Some units are separate (attached) and do not have
parent organizations that need to be indexed with
them. Armored, Aviation (pre-1987), Engineer, Field
Artillery, Maintenance, Military Intelligence, Military
Police, Ordnance, Quartermaster, Signal, Support, and
Transportation units are among the specialized units that
will not be introduced with parent units. They are ordered
by size first and numerically second.
Engineer units
18th Engineer Brigade
1st Engineer Battalion
70th Engineer Battalion
173d Engineer Company
or, if there is only one unit of its kind, list it as a main
entry.
Engineer Brigade, 18th
10-8
10.27 Separate brigades that were created as part of the Army’s
transformation to a modular force are alphabetized
according to their names as main entries. Subentries would
be listed numerically. If individual brigades have thematic
subentries, list the numerical entries first and then organize
the rest alphabetically.
Battlefield Surveillance Brigades
1st
2d
Fires Brigades [using See also, cross-reference this category
with any Artillery units indexed]
1st
2d
Maneuver Enhancement Brigades
1st
3d
Sustainment Brigade, 1st
10.28 The Special Troops Battalion may appear in narratives that
take place in 2004 to 2009. There can be one of these units
per division and one per brigade combat team. The unit
has, since 2009, begun to disappear and has been replaced
by a headquarters unit that will rarely be listed in an index.
It will be completely replaced in 2011. See also 10.29.
Index alphabetically as a main entry. Index subentries first
by size, then numerically, and then alphabetically.
Special Troops Battalions
of the 1st Infantry Division
of the 2d Armored Division
of the 2d Infantry Division
of the 10th Mountain Division
of the 1st Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division
of the 1st Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division
of the 2d Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division
of the 2d Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division
of the 4th Brigade Combat Team, 82d Airborne Division
10-9
10.29 The 10th Mountain Division is an exception to the general
rule simply because of its name. Organize by size, then
numerically, then alphabetically.
Mountain Division, 10th
in Afghanistan
in Iraq
Mountain Division, 10th, units
1st Brigade Combat Team
2d Brigade Combat Team
2d Battalion, 87th Infantry Regiment
divisional Special Troops Battalion
Special Troops Battalion, 1st Brigade Combat Team
Special Troops Battalion, 2d Brigade Combat Team
10.30 Parenthetical elements. Parenthetical elements are not part
of the official designation but do give some information
the reader might want to know about a particular unit.
Sometimes information that belongs in parentheses after
a unit’s name is inserted into a unit’s name. Terms such
as Stryker, Light, Mechanized, and Air Assault are seldom
part of an official designation. When indexing a unit that
does not seem to fit an expected pattern, please query the
project editor.
5th Stryker Brigade, 2d Infantry Division, should be 5th Brigade
Combat Team (Stryker), 2d Infantry Division
2d Stryker Cavalry Regiment should be 2d Armored Cavalry
Regiment (Stryker)
10.31 Some units will have thematic subentries associated with
them. These units are still indexed by branch/function but
are cited individually.
Infantry Division, 25th
counterinsurgency school
exercises
and incoming troops
in Thailand
Infantry divisions
1st
4th
9th
10-10
10.32 Units larger than division are treated differently, in that
they are indexed alphabetically as main entries and the
subentries are organized numerically.
Armies
First
Second
Third
Fifth
Eighth
Army Groups [World War II period]
6th
12th
Corps
I
IX
X
XVIII Airborne
Field Forces, Vietnam
I
II
10.33 Units other than those belonging to the U.S. Army should
be indexed under the service or country to which they
belong, but all units must be indexed. If enemy units are
cited in the text in italics, they should be listed in the index
in italics.
Air Force units
British Army units
Chinese Army units
Iraqi Army units
Marine Corps units
Navy units
North Vietnamese units
South Vietnamese units
Viet Cong units
10-11
Abbreviations
10.34 Abbreviations, acronyms, and initialisms fall normally
within the alphabet. Very few acronyms are indexed
as acronyms, with the spelled-out version following in
parentheses. Most, instead, are indexed as the spelled-out
version; see 10.35. In the example below are acronyms that
are best-known as acronyms.
Landing operations
LCTs (landing crafts, tank)
Logistics
LVTs (landing vehicles, tracked)
10.35 If a main entry in the index is introduced with an acronym
in the text, the acronym should be placed in parentheses
after it. Do not cite the acronym and then tell the reader to
See the spelled-out version.
Strategic Army Corps (STRAC), 216
“Strategic Army Study, 1970” (STARS–70), 165, 166
Strategic Hamlet Program, 319
Strike Command (STRICOM), 198
10.36 Names with “United” or “U.S.” “United” and “U.S.”
names are alphabetized letter by letter as they are spelled.
Use U.S. as an adjective in main entries and subentries. All
other abbreviations used in a main entry must be explained
in the entry. In subentries, use abbreviations that have been
established in the text.
United Arab Republic (UAR)
United Kingdom
United Nations Civil Assistance Command, Korea
United States Military Academy
Unity of command
Urban warfare
U.S. Army, Pacific
U.S. Army Advisory Group in China
U.S. Department of the Army
U.S. Department of Defense
10-12
Formatting
10.37 Main entry is flush left, indent two em spaces (or two tabs,
when keying text on MS Word) for runover lines; first subentry
is indented one em (one tab) space, indent two em (two tab)
spaces for runover lines; second subentry is indented three
em (three tab) spaces, indent runover lines four em (four tab)
spaces.
10.38 Use a comma (or a colon, if use of the comma results in
ambiguity) to separate entries from page numbers, and
commas to separate page numbers from each other. Use
an en dash to connect a range of page numbers. Follow
same number form as for the main text (see 5.14).
10.39 Do not use periods in the index except to terminate
complete statements. Use periods before and after
statements beginning with See and See also. When using
See or See also, ensure the main entry the reader is being
sent to is exactly as it appears in the index.
See also Mountain Division, 10th, units.
not
See also 10th Mountain Division units.
10.40When See also is followed by reference to several entries,
use semicolons to separate items.
10.41Italicize See and See also and any terms that are italicized
in the text. But if what follows (e.g., a book title or a foreign
word) is in italics, the words are preferably set in roman to
distinguish them from the rest of the cross-reference. This
is not necessary when they follow italics.
North Vietnam. See People’s Army of Vietnam.
but
People’s Army of Vietnam. See North Vietnam.
10-13
10.42 Italicize complete phrases associated with See also, such as
See also specific types of military equipment.
Editing
10.43 Check headings for alphabetical order.
10.44 Check the spelling, capitalization, and font of each
heading, consulting the page proofs if in doubt.
10.45 Check punctuation—commas, colons, semicolons, en
dashes, and the like—for proper usage according to CMH
style.
10.46 Check cross-references to make sure the reference exists
and that headings match. Ensure the cross-reference is
needed; if only a few locators are involved, substitute these
for the See reference. Ensure that the placement of all
cross-references within entries is consistent.
10.47 Add additional cross-references as necessary.
10.48 Verify there are no false locators, such as “193–93” or
“12102,” and ensure the locators are in ascending order.
10.49 Check subentries for consistency of order, whether
alphabetical or chronological.
10.50 If some entries seem overanalyzed (many subentries with
only one locator or, worse, with the same locator), combine
as many as necessary without sacrificing their usefulness.
If subentries are more elaborate than necessary, try to
simplify.
10.51 If awkward or unnecessary sub-subentries appear, correct
by adding appropriate repeated subentries or by adjusting
punctuation.
10.52 Look for long strings of unanalyzed locators and break
them up, if possible, with subentries.
10-14
10.53 Evaluate the accuracy of locators by a random check of
five to ten entries. If more than one error is found; every
locator may have to be rechecked.
10.54 If the index needs trimming, delete any entries that are
trivial, such as references to persons or places used only
as examples. Careful deletion of a handful of unnecessary
entries, especially if they are very short, does not mar an
otherwise good index.
10.55 Runover columns. If an entry breaks at the foot of the
last column on a right-hand page (recto) and resumes at
the top of the following left-hand page (verso), repeat
the main heading followed by an em dash and Continued
above the carried-over part of the index. No continued line
is necessary when entries run over to the next column on
the same page or on facing pages (verso to recto).
World War II
concentration of forces, 101,
106, 111
division organization, 119–20
industrial mobilization, 112–13,
114, 116–17
intelligence operations, 117, 180
joint operations, 85–86
World War II—Continued
logistical support, 86–87, 121–
22, 124–28
Mediterranean region, 78–79,
98–99, 105
military diplomacy, 107–08
political considerations, 113–16
prisoners of war, 114, 151, 160
10-15
Appendix A
Words List
A
acknowledgment
ad hoc (never hyphenated)
adviser (not advisor)
aero- (prefix, generally write as a closed compound)
aerodynamics, aeronautics
air- (prefix, generally, write as a closed compound)
airborne, aircraft, airfield, airplane, airpower, but air
strike (two words as noun)
Allies (U.S.); allies (enemy)
alphanumeric (no hyphen)
a.m.
Americas, the (North, South, and Central America)
anti- (prefix, generally write as a closed compound)
antiaircraft; but use hyphen with proper nouns (antiAmerican, anti-Communist) and with words beginning
with i (anti-inflammatory, anti-intrusion, anti-inflation)
antitank
appendixes (not appendices)
Army families (do not cap families)
B
backlog
baseline
benchmark, benchmarking
bi- (prefix, generally write as a closed compound)
bidirectional, biannual
bookkeeping
breakdown (n., adj.), break down (v.)
A-1
C
canceled, canceling (one l)
cannon (singular and plural)
caregiving
catalog
centi- (prefix, generally write as a closed compound)
centimeter
checklist
Civil War (Am.); civil war (other)
cleanup (n., adj.), to clean up (v.)
closed-circuit (adj.), closed circuit (n.)
closeout (n.), close out (v.)
closeup (n.), close up (v.)
coauthor
code name (n.), code-name (v.)
coeditor
Cold War (cap)
collinear (not colinear or co-linear)
colocate
combat, combated, combating
CONUS (continental United States)
coordinate
counterattack
counterbattery
counterclockwise
counterinsurgency
counterintelligence
counterrevolution
courthouse
coworker
cross fire (n.), cross-fire (v.)
cross-country (n., adj., adv.)
crossover
cross-reference (n., adj., adv.)
cutoff (n.), cut off (v.)
cutout (n.), cut out (v.)
cyberspace
A-2
D
database (one word)
decision making, decision maker (n.), decision-making
(adj.)
DoD (not DOD)
downline
download
downsize
downstream
E
e- Use e- words as follows:
in a title
E-Mail
mid-sentence
e-mail
to begin a sentence
E-mail
with proper name
e-Government
e.g. (means “for example”; do not use in formal writing; if
circumstances allow, use only in parenthetical phrases
and follow with a comma)
East Coast, Northeast, Far East (capitalized when
designating a region)
east, eastern (lowercase for compass direction)
endpoint
enemy (use masculine pronoun he, him)
ex- (prefix, use hyphen when using ex- in the sense of
“former”) ex-president, ex-governor
F
fallback (n., adj.), fall back (v.)
federal (lowercase)
firepower
firsthand
foodborne
front line (n.), front-line (adj.)
A-3
G
government (lowercase)
H
handheld (n., adj.)
handoff (n., adj.)
handout (n.), hand out (v.)
hard copy (n.), hard-copy (adj.) (not hardcopy)
hardstand (n.)
HMMWV (Humvee; High-Mobility Multipurpose
Wheeled Vehicle)
hyper- (prefix, generally write as a closed compound)
hyperlink, hypertext
I
i.e. (means “that is”; do not use in formal writing; use only
in parenthetical phrases, follow with a comma)
inbound
infrastructure
inter- (prefix, generally write as a closed compound)
interfaith, interlock, interorganizational
Internet, the Net, the Web (always capped)
J
judgment
M
machine gun (n.), machine-gun (v.)
memorandums (not memoranda)
Middle East (n.), Middle Eastern (adj.)
multi- (prefix, generally write as a closed compound)
multiauthor, multicultural, multilingual, multiyear
N
nation (meaning the United States); national
non- (prefix, generally write as a closed compound)
noncommissioned, nonnegotiable, nonviolent
A-4
O
OCONUS (outside the continental United States)
off-, on- (prefixes, generally write as closed compounds)
offlimits, offline, online, offload, onload, offshore, offsite,
onsite, onboard, oncall, oncoming, ongoing, onset
outnumbered
P
payload
p.m.
policymaking (n.), policy-making (adj.)
post- (prefix, generally write as a closed compound),
postdoctoral, postindustrial, posttraumatic, postwar
preempt
President (cap with name only, lowercase otherwise; never
abbreviate)
president-elect
prewar
proindustrial
Q
quasi-judicial (adv.), quasi argument (adj.)
R
re- (prefix, use hyphen if the word that follows begins with
an e), re-elect, but reenlist. For several other words, the
meaning will govern whether to use a hyphen, recover
(to regain), re-cover (to cover again)
recordkeeping
reunify
rollback (n., adj.), roll back (v.)
rollout (n., adj.), roll out (v.)
A-5
S
schoolhouse
self- (prefix, always takes a hyphen) self-employed, selfmade
semi- (prefix, generally write as a closed compound)
semiautomatic, semiofficial
shutdown (n.), shut-down (adj.), shut down (v.)
sociocultural
socioeconomic
soldier (lowercase)
standalone (n., adj.), stand alone (v.)
state of the art (n.), state-of-the-art (adj.)
stateside (adj., adv.)
sub- (prefix, generally write as a closed compound)
subsection
surveillance
symposia
synchronization
T
tele- (prefix, generally write as a closed compound)
telecommute, teleconference, telework
third-party (adj.), third party (n.)
time stamp
timekeeper
timeline
timetable
trans- (prefix, general write as closed compound)
transatlantic, transcontinental, transship, transsocietal;
use hyphen when combined with a proper noun, transAmerican
troubleshoot (v.), troubleshooter (n.), troubleshooting (n.)
turnaround (n., adj.), turn around (v.)
turnover
A-6
U
U.K. (adj.), United Kingdom (n.)
UN (adj.)
un- (prefix, generally write as a closed compound)
unclassified, unfunded, uninterrupted
under- (prefix, generally write as a closed compound)
underemployed, underestimate, underrate
under way (adv.)
upcoming
upstream
up-to-date (adj.), up to date (pred. adj.)
U.S. (adj.), United States (n.), stateside (adj., adv.)
USSR (no periods)
W
walk-through (n.)
war fighter, war fighting
war game (n.), war-game (v.)
warhead
warlord
waterborne
Web, the World Wide Web (do not underline or italicize
Web site URLs) Web page, Web site
West Coast, Midwest (capitalize when indicating regions)
west, western (lowercase when indicated compass direction)
wide (suffix, generally write as a closed compound) agencywide,
citywide, companywide, nationwide, worldwide; but Army-wide
workaround (n., adj.); to work around (v.)
workday
workforce
workload
workplace
workstation
workweek
world-class (adj.)
worldwide
wraparound (n., adj.), wrap around (v.)
A-7
XYZ
Year 2, Year 3. . .
Year 2000, Y2K
year-end (adj.), year end (n.)
yearlong (adj.)
year-round (adj.)
zero hour (n.), zero-hour (adj.)
ZIP code
A-8
Appendix B
Additional Service Ranks
Abbreviations
U.S. Navy Rank Abbreviations
Rank
Fleet Admiral (5-star)
Admiral (4-star)
Vice Admiral (3-star)
Rear Admiral Upper Half (2-star)
Rear Admiral Lower Half (1-star)
Captain
Commander
Lieutenant Commander
Lieutenant
Lieutenant Junior Grade
Ensign
USN Chief Warrant Officer
USN Chief Warrant Officer
USN Chief Warrant Officer
USN Chief Warrant Officer
USN Warrant Officer
Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy
Fleet Master Chief Petty Officer
Command Master Chief Petty Officer
Master Chief Petty Officer
Senior Chief Petty Officer
Chief Petty Officer
Petty Officer First Class
Petty Officer Second Class
Petty Officer Third Class
Seaman
Seaman Apprentice
Seaman Recruit
Abbreviation
Text
Footnotes
None
None
V. Adm.
R. Adm.
R. Adm.
Capt.
Cdr.
Lt. Cdr.
Lt.
Lt. (jg)
Ens.
CWO5
CWO4
CWO3
CWO2
WO1
MCPON
Fleet Adm
Adm
V Adm
R Adm
R Adm
Capt
Cdr
Lt Cdr
Lt
Lt (jg)
Ens
CWO5
CWO4
CWO3
CWO2
WO1
MCPON
MCPO
SCPO
CPO
PO1
PO2
PO3
SN
SA
SR
MCPO
SCPO
CPO
PO1
PO2
PO3
SN
SA
SR
Pay
Grade
O-10
O-9
O-8
O-7
O-6
O-5
O-4
O-3
O-2
O-1
W-5
W-4
W-3
W-2
W-1
E-9
E-9
E-9
E-9
E-8
E-7
E-6
E-5
E-4
E-3
E-2
E-1
B-1
U.S. Marine Corps Rank Abbreviations
Rank
General (4-star)
Lieutenant General (3-star)
Major General (2-star)
Brigadier General (1-star)
Colonel
Lieutenant Colonel
Major
Captain
First Lieutenant
Second Lieutenant
Chief Warrant Officer
Chief Warrant Officer
Chief Warrant Officer
Chief Warrant Officer
Warrant Officer
Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps
Master Gunnery Sergeant
Sergeant Major
First Sergeant
Master Sergeant
Gunnery Sergeant
Staff Sergeant
Sergeant
Corporal
Lance Corporal
Private First Class
Private E-1
B-2
Abbreviation
Text
Footnotes
Pay
Grade
None
Lt. Gen.
Maj. Gen.
Brig. Gen.
Col.
Lt. Col.
Maj.
Capt.
1st Lt.
2d Lt.
CWO5
CWO4
CWO3
CWO2
WO1
Sgt. Maj. MC
M. Gy. Sgt.
Sgt. Maj.
1st Sgt.
M. Sgt.
Gy. Sgt.
S. Sgt.
Sgt.
Cpl.
L. Cpl.
Pfc.
Pvt.
Gen
Lt Gen
Maj Gen
Brig Gen
Col
Lt Col
Maj
Capt
1st Lt
2d Lt
CWO5
CWO4
CWO3
CWO2
WO1
Sgt Maj MC
M Gy Sgt
Sgt Maj
1st Sgt
M Sgt
Gy Sgt
S Sgt
Sgt
Cpl
L Cpl
Pfc
Pvt
O-10
O-9
O-8
O-7
O-6
O-5
O-4
O-3
O-2
O-1
W-5
W-4
W-3
W-2
W-1
E-9
E-9
E-9
E-8
E-8
E-7
E-6
E-5
E-4
E-3
E-2
E-1
U.S. Air Force Rank Abbreviations
Rank
Abbreviation
Text
Footnotes
Pay
Grade
General of the Air Force (5-star)
General (4-star)
Lieutenant General (3-star)
Major General (2-star)
Brigadier General (1-star)
Colonel
Lieutenant Colonel
Major
Captain
First Lieutenant
Second Lieutenant
None
None
Lt. Gen.
Maj. Gen.
Brig. Gen.
Col.
Lt. Col.
Maj.
Capt.
1st Lt.
2d Lt.
Gen
Gen
Lt Gen
Maj Gen
Brig Gen
Col
Lt Col
Maj
Capt
1st Lt
2d Lt
Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force
Ch. M. Sgt. AF
Ch M Sgt AF
E-9
Command Chief Master Sergeant
Cmd. Ch. M.
Sgt.
Cmd Ch M
Sgt
E-9
Chief Master Sergeant
Ch. M. Sgt.
Ch M Sgt
E-9
Senior Master Sergeant
Sr. M. Sgt.
Sr M Sgt
E-8
Master Sergeant
Technical Sergeant
Staff Sergeant
Senior Airman
Airman First Class
Airman
Airman Basic
M. Sgt.
Tech. Sgt.
S. Sgt.
Sr. Amn.
A1C
Amn.
M Sgt
Tech Sgt
S Sgt
Sr Amn
A1C
Amn
E-7
E-6
E-5
E-4
E-3
E-2
E-1
O-10
O-9
O-8
O-7
O-6
O-5
O-4
O-3
O-2
O-1
B-3
Appendix C
Enlisted
Rank Insignia of the
U.S. Armed Forces
C-1
C-2
Enlisted
C-3
Officer
C-4
Warrant Officer
Index
Abbreviations
“a” or “an” preceding, 3-2
addresses, 4-4
in charts, 4-3, 4-4
in citations, 8-5–8-8
dates, 6-2
division of, 3-13
first and subsequent references, 3-2
general rules, 3-1–3-2
geographic terms, 4-3–4-5, 8-5
in indexes, 10-12
on maps, 4-3, 4-4
measurements, 6-4
military organizations, 1-14
military ranks, 1-17–1-18, 8-8,
B-1–B-3
military units, 1-14
names of people, 1-3
parts of publications, 3-3
plurals, 3-4
punctuation, 3-3
in tables, 4-3, 4-4, 7-2
time, 6-3
titles of people, 1-5
Academic degrees, punctuating, 3-3
Acknowledgments, 1-4, 9-5
Acronyms, 3-1–3-2, 8-5, 10-12
Addresses
abbreviation rules, 4-4
comma use, 2-5
division of e-mail and URL, 3-14
Adjectives
for armed services, 1-10
century as compound adjective, 6-3
derived from organizational names,
1-2, 1-10
hyphenation of unit modifiers,
3-4–3-5
number expressions, 5-2
Adverbial expressions, punctuating, 2-7
Adverbs, semicolon with, 2-15
Advisory Committee page, 9-4, 9-11
Air Force. See U.S. Air Force.
Aircraft designations, 1-19–1-20
Alliance designations, 1-11
Alphabetization in indexes, 10-3–10-4
A.m., 6-3
Ammunition, 1-19, 2-9
Apostrophe, 2-2
Appendixes, 9-5
Arab names, 1-4
Archival material, citations for, 8-9–8 15
Armed forces. See specific service by
name.
Army. See U.S. Army.
Art, titles for works of, 1-7
Article titles, capitalization of, 1-7
Author biographical note, 9-4, 9-17
Award titles, 1-12
Back matter, 9-5–9-6
Battles, names of, 1-11
Bibliographical citations
arrangement of, 8-22
for books, 8-18–8-19
for dissertations, 8-21
for government publications, 8-21
for lectures, 8-21
for newspapers, 8-20
for periodicals, 8-20
for speeches, 8-21
for theses, 8-21
Bibliographies, 1-8, 9-5, 9-6
Biographical note, author, 9-4, 9-17
Block quotations, 3-9
Boldface, punctuation with, 2-1
Books, 1-7, 2-3, 9-1–9-6, 9-7–9-21.
See also under Bibliographical
citations; Footnote citations.
Brackets, 2-1, 2-3, 2-7, 2-14
Brochures, 9-6
Bulleted lists, 3-10–3-11
Index-1
Camps, capitalization, 4-1
Capitalization
alliances, 1-11
awards, 1-12
battles, 1-11
bulleted lists, 3-10
in citations, 8-5–8-8
code names, 1-11–1-12
colon use, 2-4
conflicts, 1-11
ethnic groups, 1-6
geographic terms, 1-1, 4-1–4-3
index entries, 10-1
internal Army documents, 1-7
legislation, 1-6
medals, 1-12
military equipment, 1-19–1-20
military orders, 1-6
military titles, 1-16
organizational names, 1-1–1-3, 1-9–111
political parties, 1-3
public acts, 1-6
publication titles and parts, 1-7–1-8
racial groups, 1-6
socioeconomic groups, 1-6
titles of people, 1-4–1-5
wars, 1-11
Captions, photo, 3-6, 7-3
Cataloging-in-Publication (CIP) data page,
9-3, 9-10
Center of Military History (CMH), U.S.
Army. See U.S. Army Center of
Military History.
Century as compound adjective, 6-3
Chapters, 1-8, 8-19
Charts
abbreviation rules, 4-3, 4-4
capitalization, 1-8
dates in, 6-2
footnotes, 7-2
italics for, 1-8
numbering, 7-2
references to, 1-8, 7-1
Chinese names, 1-4
Citations. See Bibliographical citations;
Footnote citations.
Cities, capitalization, 1-1
Civilian titles, 1-4–1-5
Coast Guard. See U.S. Coast Guard, rank
insignia.
Code names, 1-11–1-12
Index-2
Coined phrases, 2-14
Colloquial coinages for military terms, 1-9
Colon
in footnotes, 8-8
general rules, 2-3–2-4
in list introduction, 2-3, 3-10
in quotation introduction, 2-4, 2-7, 3-8
with quotation marks, 2-15
Columns in tables, 7-2
Combat outposts, capitalization, 4-1
Comma
addresses, 2-5
adverbial expressions, 2-7
brackets, 2-7
“et al.” use, 2-6
geographic terms, 2-5, 4-3
introductory phrases, 2-4, 2-7, 3-8
military units, 1-13
name suffixes, 2-5
numbers, 2-5, 5-2
parentheses, 2-7
parenthetical elements, 2-5, 2-7
with quotation marks, 2-15
series, 2-4
short clause series, 2-6
that versus which and, 2-6
Common terms with special military
meaning, 1-11
Compass points, 4-4
Compound titles, 2-3
Compound words
apostrophe with, 2-2
century as compound adjective, 6-3
division of, 3-12–3-14
hyphenation of, 2-9, 2-11, 3-4–3-6
Conflicts, names of, 1-11
Congressional legislation, 1-6
Contents, table of, 9-4, 9-12–9-15
Corporate name suffixes, 2-5
Counties, 4-3
Countries, 1-1, 2-2, 4-4
Cross-references in indexes, 10-2, 1013–10-14
D-day time designations, 6-3
Dashes
2-em dash, 2-8, 2-12
3-em dash, 2-8, 2-12, 8-22
em dash, 2-8, 2-11–2-12
en dash, 2-8, 2-10–2-11
See also Hyphens and hyphenation.
Dates, 2-10, 3-13, 5-2, 6-1–6-3
Days of the week, abbreviations, 6-2
Dedication, 9-4
Descriptive versus possessive words, and
apostrophe, 2-2
Diagrams, 1-8, 7-3
Dialogue. See Quotations.
Dictionary, spelling authority, 3-1
Display type, end-of-line punctuation in,
9-3
Documentation
bibliography, 1-8, 8-18–8-22, 9-5, 9-6
footnotes/endnotes, 2-16, 6-2, 7-2,
8-1–8-17, 10-1
See also Publications.
Double-posting in indexes, 10-2
E-mail addresses, division of, 3-14
“Elect,” hyphenation with, 3-6
Ellipsis points, 2-8, 3-8, 3-14
Em dashes, 2-8, 2-11–2-12, 8-22
En dash, 2-8, 2-10–2-11
Endnotes versus footnotes, 8-1. See also
Footnotes.
Enemy code names, 1-12
Enemy unit names, 1-20
Enlisted rank insignia, C-1–C-2
Epigraph, 9-4
Equipment terms, 1-19–1-20
Et al., 2-6
Ethnic group names, 1-6
“Ex,” hyphenation with, 3-5
Exclamation point, 2-8, 2-15
Figures, expressing numbers in, 5-2–5-3
Fiscal year, 6-3
Fonts, 2-1
Footnote citations
after action report (AAR)
annual historical summary (Annual
Hist Sum), 8-12
books, 8-2, 8-3
bulletin (Bull), 8-13
circular (Cir), 8-13
CMH publications, 8-2–8-3
command reports (Cmd Rpts), 8-12
company morning report (Co Morning
Rpt), 8-12
courses and course materials, 8-14
daily journal (Daily Jnl), 8-12
daily personnel summary (Daily
Personnel Sum), 8-12
directive (Dir), 8-13
disposition form (DF), 8-9–8-10
dissertation, 8-14
e-mail, 8-9–8-10
field order (FO), 8-13
fragmentary order (FRAGO), 8-12
general orders (GO), 8-13
government publications, 8-3
intelligence summary (Intel Sum)
interview (Interv), 8-10
lecture, 8-14
letter, 8-9–8-10
memorandum (Memo), 8-9–8-10
message (Msg), 8-9–8-10
newspaper, 8-4
online published material, 8-16
operation order (OPORD), 8-12
operational report-lessons learned
(ORLL), 8-12
operational summary (Op Sum), 8-12
periodic intelligence report (Periodic
Intel Rpt), 8-12
periodicals, 8-4
report (Rpt), 8-10
situation report (Sitrep), 8-12
speeches, 8-14
theses, 8-14
unpublished studies, 8-13
Web site content, 8-15–8-17
Footnotes
abbreviations, 8-5–8-8
capitalization, 8-5–8-8
chart references, 7-2
dates in, 6-2
digital document collections in, 8-16
editorial style, 8-1
and endnotes, 8-1
file information of, 8-11
historians files, 8-17
indexable, 10-1
numbering, 8-1
punctuation, 2-16, 8-5, 8-8
quotations, 3-8, 3-9, 8-1
table references, 7-2
Foreign terms
geographic, 4-6
organizations, 1-20
people’s names, 1-4
rank designations, 1-21
titles of people, 1-21
translation of, 1-20
unit designations, 1-13, 1-20, 10-11
words and phrases, 3-11–3-12
Index-3
Foreword, 1-8, 9-4, 9-16
Fort, 4-1, 4-3
Fractions, 2-9, 5-1
Front matter, 9-1–9-5
Frontispiece, 9-3, 9-8
General officer ranks, abbreviation, 1-18
Generic references to organizational
names, 1-2
Geographic terms
abbreviation, 4-3–4-5, 8-5
capitalization, 1-1, 4-1–4-3
foreign, 4-6
punctuation, 2-2, 2-5, 2-11, 4-3
Glossary, 9-5
Government agency names, 1-2
Groups, organized, capitalization, 1-3
H-hour time designations, 6-3
Half title page, 9-3, 9-7
Harbors, capitalization, 4-1
Headquarters, capitalization, 1-10
Historians files, citation style, 8-17
Honorific titles, 1-4
Hyphens and hyphenation
adverbs and, 3-5
ambiguity, avoiding, 3-6
appearance, 2-8
compound words, 2-9, 2-11, 3-4–3-6
dates, 3-13
doubling a vowel, avoiding, 3-6
en dash in place of, 2-11
geographic terms, 2-11
numbers, 2-8, 2-9
ordnance, 2-9
prefixes, 3-5, 3-6
proper names and, 3-5
single-letter designation, 2-9
suffixes, 3-5, 3-6
tripling consonants, avoiding, 3-6
unit modifiers, 3-4–3-5
word division and, 3-12–3-14
Ibid., 8-4
Idem, 8-5
In-text references to books and
periodicals, 8-20
Indefinite article prior to abbreviations,
3-2
Independent clauses, punctuating, 2-15
Indexes
abbreviations, 10-12
Index-4
alphabetizing, 10-3–10-4
capitalizing entries, 10-1
capitalizing title, 1-8
cross-references, 10-2, 10-13–10-14
discursive material in footnotes, 10-1
double-posting, 10-2
editing, 10-14–10-15
formatting, 10-1, 10-13–10-14
general rules, 10-1–10-3
locators, 10-2, 10-14–10-15
names, 10-2, 10-4, 10-12
note style, 10-1
ranks in, 10-2
runover column handling, 10-15
subentries, 10-1, 10-2, 10-3, 10-14
titles of people, 10-2
units, 10-5–10-11
Insignia, rank, C-1–C-4
Internal Army documents, 1-7, 2-14
Internet
citations for sources from, 8-15–8-17
e-mail address division, 3-14
URLs, 3-14, 8-15, 8-17
Introductory phrases, punctuating, 2-4,
2-7, 3-8, 3-10
Italics
captions, 3-6, 7-3
enemy code names, 1-12
enemy unit names, 1-20
foreign terms, 1-20, 3-11–3-12
general rules, 3-6–3-7
in index cross-references, 10-13–10-14
Latin terms, 3-7
possessives, 3-6
publication titles and parts, 1-7–1-8
ship names, 1-19
words as terms, 3-6
Joint possession, apostrophe with, 2-2
Journal titles, 1-7
Landing zone, capitalization, 4-1
Latin terms, 3-7
Latitude designation, 6-4
Legislation, 1-6
Legislative bodies, names of, 1-2
Letters of the alphabet
en dash connector, 2-10
italics use, 3-6–3-7
Library of Congress CIP data pages, 9-3,
9-10
Line breaks, 3-12–3-14
Lists, 2-3, 2-16, 3-10–3-11, 3-13
Locators in indexes, 10-2, 10-14–10-15
Longitude designation, 6-4
Map symbol page, 9-6
Maps, 1-8, 4-4, 7-1–7-2, 7-3
Marine Corps. See U.S. Marine Corps.
Measurements, 6-4
Medal titles, 1-12
Military alliances, 1-11
Military Instruction seal, use of, 9-3
Military orders, 1-6
Military ranks
abbreviation rules, 1-17–1-18, 8-8,
B-1–B-3
capitalization of, 1-16
foreign military personnel, 1-21
in indexes, 10-2
initial and subsequent references, 1-17
insignia by service, C-1–C-4
numbers in, 1-17
separating name from service or
branch, 1-17
Military terms
adjectives designating armed services,
1-10
alliances, 1-11
areas and boundaries, 4-2
awards, 1-12
battles, 1-11
capitalization of, 1-11
code names, 1-11–1-12
colloquial coinages, 1-9
common terms with special military
meaning, 1-11
conflicts, 1-11
equipment, 1-19–1-20
foreign terms, 1-4, 1-13, 1-20–1-21,
10-11
headquarters, 1-10
individual military members, 1-9
medals, 1-12
organizations, 1-9–1-11, 1-14
wars, 1-11
weapons, 1-19
See also Military ranks; Military
units.
Military titles, 1-5, 1-16, 1-17. See also
Military ranks.
Military units
abbreviations, 1-14
comma in, 1-13
common-noun designations, 1-11
enemy names, 1-20
foreign forces, 1-13, 1-20, 10-11
general rules, 1-9–1-10
in indexes, 10-5–10-11
national guard, 1-10
numbers in, 1-14
reserve, 1-10
U.S. Air Force, 1-15
U.S. Army, 1-12–1-14
U.S. Marine Corps, 1-15
U.S. Navy, 1-15
Money, expressing sums of, 5-2
Monographs, 1-7, 8-13, 9-1–9-6
Months, abbreviations, 6-2
Motion picture titles, 1-7
Multiple hyphenated compounds, 2-9
Multiple numbers, 5-3
Multiple parenthetical elements, 2-13
Multiple- versus single-author
bibliographic entries, 8-22
Multivolume works, bibliographic
references, 8-19
Names, 1-1–1-3. See also Titles.
National Archives and Records
Administration file information,
8-11
National Guard units, 1-10
Nationality designation for name clarity,
1-20
Navy. See U.S. Navy.
Newspapers, 1-7, 8-4, 8-20
Notes (citations). See Footnote citations.
Numbered lists, 3-10, 3-11
Numbers
charts, 7-2
commas in, 2-5, 5-2
division of, 3-13
expressing in figures, 5-2–5-3
expressing in words, 1-14, 5-1–5-2,
5-3
footnotes, 8-1
front matter pages, 9-1
hyphens, 2-8, 2-9
maps, 7-3
multiple, 5-3
ordinal, 5-2, 5-3, 6-1
ranges of, 2-10, 5-3, 6-2
in rank titles, 1-17
tables, 7-1
in unit designations, 1-14
Index-5
“Odd,” hyphenation with, 3-6
Officers, rank insignia, C-3
Online documentation. See Internet.
Operational code names, 1-11–1-12
Orders, military, 1-6
Ordinal numbers, 5-2, 5-3, 6-1
Ordnance, 1-19, 2-9
Organizational names, 1-1–1-3, 1-9–1-11,
1-14, 1-20
Organized groups, capitalization, 1-3
Page numbers in indexes, 10-2,
10-14–10-15
Pagination of parts of publications, 9-6
Pamphlets, 1-7, 9-6
Paraphrased forms of organizational
names, 1-2
Parentheses
brackets within, 2-3
font agreement, 2-1
general rules, 2-13
multiple, 2-13
punctuation around, 2-7, 2-13,
2-14
run-in numbered lists, 3-11
Parenthetical elements
comma use, 2-5
em dash use, 2-11–2-12
multiple, 2-13
punctuating, 2-7
references to charts, maps, and
tables, 1-8
Parts of publications
abbreviations of, 3-3
back matter, 9-5–9-6
capitalization of, 1-8
charts, 1-8, 4-3, 4-4, 6-2, 7-1, 7-2
dedication, 9-4
diagrams, 1-8, 7-3
division of references to, 3-13
front matter, 1-8, 9-1–9-5, 9-7–9-21
italics in, 1-7–1-8
maps, 1-8, 4-3, 4-4, 7-1, 7-3
photographs, 3-6, 7-1, 7-3
tables, 1-8, 4-3, 4-4, 6-2, 7-1–7-2
People’s names and titles
abbreviation, 1-3, 1-5
capitalization, 1-4–1-5
colloquial coinages for military
members, 1-9
dashes for missing parts of, 2-12
division of, 3-13
Index-6
ethnic groups, 1-6
first mentions, 1-3
foreign notables, 1-4, 1-21
in indexes, 10-2, 10-4, 10-12
individual generic military
references, 1-9
military titles, 1-5, 1-16, 1-17
plurals, 1-5
racial groups, 1-6
socioeconomic groups, 1-6
subsequent mentions, 1-3
suffixes in names, 2-5
See also Military ranks.
Percent, expression style, 5-2
Period, 2-13, 2-14, 2-15, 3-8, 3-10
Periodicals, 1-7, 8-4, 8-20
Photographs, 3-6, 7-1, 7-3
Phrase style in lists, punctuating, 3-11
Place names. See Geographic terms.
Plays, titles of, 1-7
Plurals, 1-5, 3-4
P.m., 6-3
Point (place), abbreviation rule, 4-3
Political alliances, 1-11
Political areas, 4-2
Political parties, 1-3
Port (place), 4-1, 4-3
Possessives, 2-2, 3-6
Preface, 1-8, 9-5, 9-18–9-21
Prefixes, 3-5, 3-6
Private organizations, capitalization
of, 1-3
Proper nouns, 1-5, 3-5. See also
Geographic terms; People’s
names and titles; Titles.
Provinces, 1-1, 4-3
Public acts, 1-6
Public place names, 4-3
Publications
bibliographies, 1-8, 8-18–8-22, 9-5,
9-6
books, 1-7, 2-3, 8-18–8-20, 9-1–9-6,
9-7–9-21
capitalization of titles, 1-7, 1-8
footnotes/endnotes, 2-16, 6-2, 7-2,
8-1–8-17, 10-1
italics use for titles, 1-7, 1-8
journals, 1-7
pamphlets, 1-7, 9-6
periodicals, 1-7, 8-4, 8-20
quotation marks around titles, 2-14
See also Parts of publications.
Punctuation
abbreviations, 3-3
apostrophe, 2-2
brackets, 2-1, 2-3, 2-7, 2-14
colon, 2-3–2-4, 2-7, 2-15, 3-8,
3-10, 8-8
dashes, 2-8, 2-10–2-12, 8-22
ellipsis points, 2-8, 3-8, 3-14
exclamation point, 2-8, 2-15
general rules, 2-1
independent clauses, 2-15
index format, 10-13
lists, 2-3, 2-16, 3-10–3-11
parentheses, 2-1, 2-3, 2-7, 2-13,
2-14, 3-11
period, 2-13, 2-14, 2-15, 3-8, 3-10
question mark, 2-15
quotation marks, 2-8, 2-14–2-15,
3-9, 3-12
semicolon, 2-15–2-16, 8-8
titles in parts of publications, 9-3
See also Comma; Hyphens and
hyphenation.
“Quasi,” hyphenation with, 3-5
Question mark, 2-15
Quotation marks, 2-8, 2-14–2-15, 3-9,
3-12
Quotations, 2-4, 2-7, 2-15, 3-7–3-10,
8-1
Racial groups, names of, 1-6
Ranges of numbers, 2-10, 5-3, 6-2
Ranks, military. See Military ranks.
Regiments. See U.S. Army.
Repositories, archival material, 8-11
Reserve units, 1-10
Run-in lists, 2-3, 2-16, 3-13
Run-in quotations, 3-9
“Saint,” abbreviation rules, 4-3
“Self,” hyphenation with, 3-5
Semicolon, 2-15–2-16, 8-8
Serial lists, 2-16
Series comma, 2-4
Series titles, 1-7, 8-3, 8-11, 8-18
Ship designations, 1-19–1-20
Short clauses, commas in series of, 2-6
Signature block in foreword, 9-4
Single-letter designation, hyphen
with, 2-9
Single versus multiauthor
bibliographic entries, 8-22
Socioeconomic groups, names of, 1-6
Spaces following ending punctuation,
2-1
Spelling, 3-1, 3-15, 4-1
Spelling out numbers as words, 1-14,
5-1–5-2, 5-3
States, 1-1, 4-3, 4-5, 8-5
Structure names, 4-3
Subentries in indexes, 10-1, 10-2,
10-3, 10-14
Suffixes, 2-5, 3-5, 3-6
Table of contents, 9-4, 9-12–9-15
Tables, 1-8, 4-3, 4-4, 6-2, 7-1–7-2
Temperature, 6-4
Territories, 1-1, 4-3, 4-5
That versus which, 2-6
Thoroughfare names, 4-3
Time, 2-11, 5-2, 6-3–6-4
Time zones, 6-4
Title page, 9-3, 9-9
Titles
award, 1-12
civilian, 1-4–1-5
medal, 1-12
military, 1-5, 1-16, 1-17
parts of publications, 1-8, 9-3
publication, 1-7, 2-3, 2-14
See also People’s names and titles.
Treaties, 1-6
U.K., abbreviation rule, 3-3
Unit modifiers, 3-4–3-5, 5-2
United States
abbreviation rule, 3-3
state and territory name rules, 1-1,
4-3, 4-5, 8-5
Units, military. See Military units.
Unpublished works
bibliographic references, 8-21
citation style, 8-2, 8-9–8-15, 8-17
internal Army documents, 1-7,
2-14
URL (universal resource locator),
3-14, 8-15, 8-17
U.S. abbreviation, 3-3, 10-12
U.S. Air Force
abbreviation of ranks, B-3
capitalization rules, 1-15
rank insignia, C-1, C-3–C-4
unit designations, 1-15
Index-7
U.S. Army
abbreviation of ranks, 1-17–
1-18
capitalization rules, 1-12
internal documents, 1-7, 2-14
rank insignia, C-1, C-3–C-4
units and organizations, 1-12–1-14,
10-5–10-6
U.S. Army Center of Military History
(CMH), 1-7, 1-14, 8-3
U.S. Coast Guard, rank insignia,
C-2–C-4
U.S. Marine Corps
abbreviation of ranks, B-2
capitalization rules, 1-15
Index-8
rank insignia, C-1, C-3–C-4
unit designations, 1-15
U.S. Navy
abbreviation of ranks, B-1
capitalization rules, 1-15
rank insignia, C-2–C-4
unit designations, 1-15
Wars, names of, 1-11
Weapon designations, 1-19
Which versus that, 2-6
Word division, 3-12–3-14
Words list, A-1–A-8
Words as terms, italicizing, 3-6
World Wide Web. See Internet.